Enabling long-lived organic room temperature phosphorescence in polymers by subunit interlocking

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Abstract

Long-lived room temperature phosphorescence (LRTP) is an attractive optical phenomenon in organic electronics and photonics. Despite the rapid advance, it is still a formidable challenge to explore a universal approach to obtain LRTP in amorphous polymers. Based on the traditional polyethylene derivatives, we herein present a facile and concise chemical strategy to achieve ultralong phosphorescence in polymers by ionic bonding cross-linking. Impressively, a record LRTP lifetime of up to 2.1 s in amorphous polymers under ambient conditions is set up. Moreover, multicolor long-lived phosphorescent emission can be procured by tuning the excitation wavelength in single-component polymer materials. These results outline a fundamental principle for the construction of polymer materials with LRTP, endowing traditional polymers with fresh features for potential applications.

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Cai, S., Ma, H., Shi, H., Wang, H., Wang, X., Xiao, L., … Huang, W. (2019). Enabling long-lived organic room temperature phosphorescence in polymers by subunit interlocking. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11749-x

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