Enhanced Room-Temperature Photoluminescence Quantum Yield in Morphology Controlled J-Aggregates

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Abstract

Supramolecular assemblies from organic dyes forming J-aggregates are known to exhibit narrowband photoluminescence with full-width at half maximum of ≈9 nm (260 cm−1). Applications of these high color purity emitters, however, are hampered by the rather low photoluminescence quantum yields reported for cyanine J-aggregates, even when formed in solution. Here, it is demonstrated that cyanine J-aggregates can reach an order of magnitude higher photoluminescence quantum yield (increase from 5% to 60%) in blend solutions of water and alkylamines at room temperature. By means of time-resolved photoluminescence studies, an increase in the exciton lifetime as a result of the suppression of non-radiative processes is shown. Small-angle neutron scattering studies suggest a necessary condition for the formation of such highly emissive J-aggregates: the presence of a sharp water/amine interface for J-aggregate assembly and the coexistence of nanoscale-sized water and amine domains to restrict the J-aggregate size and solubilize monomers, respectively.

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Anantharaman, S. B., Kohlbrecher, J., Rainò, G., Yakunin, S., Stöferle, T., Patel, J., … Heier, J. (2021). Enhanced Room-Temperature Photoluminescence Quantum Yield in Morphology Controlled J-Aggregates. Advanced Science, 8(4). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.201903080

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