This work discusses quantitatively the energy transfer mechanism that occurs in the white-light emission of
sol−gel derived amine- and amide-functionalized hybrids. The white-light photoluminescence (PL) results
from a convolution of the emission originated in the NH/CO groups of the organic/inorganic cross-links
with electron-hole recombinations occurring in the siloxane nanoclusters, both emissions typical of donor−acceptor pairs. Two model compounds that reproduce separately the two hybrid's emissions were synthesized
and characterized by X-ray diffraction, 29Si/H/13C magic-angle spinning NMR, diffuse reflectance, Fourier
transform−IR, and photoluminescence spectroscopy to support their use as organic and inorganic structural
models for the two counterparts of the hybrids. The comparison between the lifetimes of the two emissions
of the inorganic and organic model compounds with those of the hybrids, the Arrhenius dependence with
temperature of the siliceous-related lifetime in the hybrids, and the nonexponential behavior of the decay
curve of the siliceous-related emission under lower excitation wavelengths are experimental evidence supporting
the occurrence of energy transfer in the hybrids. This energy transfer rate is quantitatively estimated for
d-U(600) (the diureasil host with smaller number of polymer repeat units) generalizing the ideas proposed
recently for the intramolecular energy transfer between singlet and triplet ligand levels and ligand-to-metal
charge transfer states in lanthanide coordination compounds. The dipole−dipole energy transfer rate between
the two emitting centers is 1.3 × 109 s-1, larger than the value estimated for the transfer rate mediated by the
exchange mechanism, 3.7 × 108 s-1. The predicted room-temperature emission quantum yield of that diureasil
hybrid is comparable to the corresponding experimental value (7 ± 1 %), pointing out a strong dependence
of the radiative component values of the two emissions with temperature, induced by the glass−rubber phase
transition of the hybrid's polymer chains.
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