1 research outputs found
Continuous Tuning of Organic Phosphorescence by Diluting Triplet Diffusion at the Molecular Level
Organic long-persistent
phosphorescent materials are advantageous
due to the cost-effectiveness and easy processability. The organic
phosphorescence is achieved by the long-lived triplet excitons, and
the challenges are recognized regarding the various nonradiative pathways
to quench the emission lifetime. Taming long-lived phosphorescence
is generally engaged with the charge-transfer or exciton diffusion
in molecular stacking to stabilize triplet excitons or form a photoinduced
ionized state. Herein, we elucidate that the triplet-diffusion can
cause a significant quenching that is not thermally activated by using
a system of perfluorinated organic complexes. Hence, we suggest a
coevaporation technique to dilute a single phosphorescence-emitting
molecule with another optically inactive molecule to suppress the
diffusion-induced quenching, tuning the phosphorescence lifetime and
spectral features continuously. The work successfully suggests a general
semitheoretical method of quantifying the population equilibrium to
elucidate the loss mechanisms for organic phosphorescence