A new approach exploiting thermally activated delayed fluorescence molecules to optimize solar thermal energy storage

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Abstract

We propose a new concept exploiting thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) molecules as photosensitizers, storage units and signal transducers to harness solar thermal energy. Molecular composites based on the TADF core phenoxazine–triphenyltriazine (PXZ-TRZ) anchored with norbornadiene (NBD) were synthesized, yielding compounds PZDN and PZTN with two and four NBD units, respectively. Upon visible-light excitation, energy transfer to the triplet state of NBD occurred, followed by NBD → quadricyclane (QC) conversion, which can be monitored by changes in steady-state or time-resolved spectra. The small S1-T1 energy gap was found to be advantageous in optimizing the solar excitation wavelength. Upon tuning the molecule’s triplet state energy lower than that of NBD (61 kcal/mol), as achieved by another composite PZQN, the efficiency of the NBD → QC conversion decreased drastically. Upon catalysis, the reverse QC → NBD reaction occurred at room temperature, converting the stored chemical energy back to heat with excellent reversibility.

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Meng, F. Y., Chen, I. H., Shen, J. Y., Chang, K. H., Chou, T. C., Chen, Y. A., … Chou, P. T. (2022). A new approach exploiting thermally activated delayed fluorescence molecules to optimize solar thermal energy storage. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28489-0

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