As a general protocol, the AIE behavior of NI-TPy
+Br
– was first evaluated in CH
3CH
2OH/water mixtures with different water fractions (
fw), which enabled fine-tuning of the solvent polarity and the extent of solute aggregation. As show in
Fig. 1, the pure CH
3CH
2OH solution of NI-TPy
+Br
– shows blue fluorescence with an emission maximum around 400 nm. With the gradual addition of water into CH
3CH
2OH (
fw = 70 vol%), no obvious change occurs in the blue emission of NI-TPy
+Br
– and a new bathochromically shift emission is visible around 545 nm, which can be attributed to the inhibited twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) of TPy
+ with the increasing solvent polarity [
22]. The emission peak at 545 nm is dramatically enhanced with the continued increase in
fw, and a typical AIE effect is observed. However, the emission intensity at 400 nm is just slightly weakened. This may be ascribed to the fluorescence emission balance between the decrease monomer emission intensity at 450 nm of TPy
+ (Fig. S1 in Supporting information) and the increase
π-π stacking emission intensity at 380 nm of NI (the efficiency of the intersystem crossing process of NI decreased with increasing solvent polarity, thus leading to the increasing fluorescence efficiency) [
21,
23] in the NI-TPy
+Br
– aggregation state. In addition, as shown in Fig. S2 (Supporting information), the monomer of NI and TPy
+ exhibit similar absorption peaks around 350 nm in the UV–vis spectra, indicating that both fluorophores can be independently excited by the same wavelength. Thus, the results of this study demonstrated a unique AIE system that can be constructed using two independent fluorophores
via the strategy of "single excitation, multiple emissions".