Visible room-temperature phosphorescence of pure organic crystals via a radical-ion-pair mechanism

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Abstract

The afterglow of phosphorescent compounds can be distinguished from background fluorescence and scattered light by a time-resolved observation, which is a beneficial property for bioimaging. Phosphorescence emission accompanies spin-forbidden transitions from an excited singlet state through an excited triplet state to a ground singlet state. Since these intersystem crossings are facilitated usually by the heavy-atom effect, metal-free organic solids are seldom phosphorescent, although these solids have recently been refurbished as low-cost, eco-friendly phosphorescent materials. Here, we show that crystalline isophthalic acid exhibits room-temperature phosphorescence with an afterglow that lasts several seconds through a nuclear spin magnetism-assisted spin exchange of a radical ion pair. The obvious afterglow that facilitates a time-resolved detection and the unusual phosphorescence mechanism that enables emission intensification by nuclear spin managements are promising for exploiting the phosphorescence materials in novel applications such as bioimaging.

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Kuno, S., Akeno, H., Ohtani, H., & Yuasa, H. (2015). Visible room-temperature phosphorescence of pure organic crystals via a radical-ion-pair mechanism. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 17(24), 15989–15995. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5cp01203a

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