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Reduced Intrinsic Non-Radiative Losses Allow Room-Temperature Triplet Emission from Purely Organic Emitters.

Yungui LiLihui JiangWenlan LiuShunqi XuTian-Yi LiFelix FriesOlaf ZeikaYingping ZouCharusheela RamananSimone LenkReinhard ScholzDenis AndrienkoXinliang FengKarl LeoSebastian Reineke
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2021)
Persistent luminescence from triplet excitons in organic molecules is rare, as fast non-radiative deactivation typically dominates over radiative transitions. This work demonstrates that the substitution of a hydrogen atom in a derivative of phenanthroimidazole with an N-phenyl ring can substantially stabilize the excited state. This stabilization converts an organic material without phosphorescence emission into a molecular system exhibiting efficient and ultralong afterglow phosphorescence at room temperature. Results from systematic photophysical investigations, kinetic modeling, excited-state dynamic modeling, and single-crystal structure analysis identify that the long-lived triplets originate from a reduction of intrinsic non-radiative molecular relaxations. Further modification of the N-phenyl ring with halogen atoms affects the afterglow lifetime and quantum yield. As a proof-of-concept, an anticounterfeiting device is demonstrated with a time-dependent Morse code feature for data encryption based on these emitters. A fundamental design principle is outlined to achieve long-lived and emissive triplet states by suppressing intrinsic non-radiative relaxations in the form of molecular vibrations or rotations.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • energy transfer
  • crystal structure
  • ionic liquid
  • water soluble
  • molecular dynamics
  • single molecule
  • light emitting
  • machine learning
  • quantum dots
  • deep learning
  • electronic health record