Direct population of triplet excited states through singlet-triplet transition for visible-light excitable organic afterglow

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Abstract

Invoking efficient afterglow in metal-free organic molecules represents an important material advancement. However, organic afterglow suffers from low intensity and efficiency and generally needs to be excited by UV light owing to its spin-forbidden phosphorescent nature that essentially requires facile intersystem crossing (ISC). Here, we propose a strategy to bypass the traditional ISC through facilitating singlet-triplet transition to directly populate triplet excited states from the ground state by combining synergetic effects of both heavy/hetero-atom incorporation and aromatic aggregation. Verified by systematic experimental and computational investigations, this unique singlet-to-triplet absorption results in a much improved organic afterglow quantum efficiency up to 9.5% with a prolonged lifetime of 0.25 s under visible-light irradiation. Fundamentally, this work illustrates for the first time the great potential of the direct population method to red-shift the excitation wavelength and improve the afterglow efficiency, offering important clues for the development of triplet-state involved organic optoelectronic technologies.

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Yuan, J., Chen, R., Tang, X., Tao, Y., Xu, S., Jin, L., … Huang, W. (2019). Direct population of triplet excited states through singlet-triplet transition for visible-light excitable organic afterglow. Chemical Science, 10(19), 5031–5038. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8sc05198d

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