Purely organic room-temperature phosphorescent (RTP)
polymers with
good processability and flexibility over small molecular crystals
are highly attractive. Although many non-conjugated polymers (non-CPs)
with efficient RTP emission have been reported, the development of
metal-free RTP CPs remains a formidable challenge. Herein, CPs with
clear RTP emission in both doped and neat films are readily prepared
by introducing a selenium-containing phenoselenazine unit into conjugated
backbones. The resulting RTP CPs can achieve phosphorescence lifetimes
ranging from microseconds to milliseconds and phosphorescence quantum
yields of up to 17.2% in film states, representing the highest value
for metal-free CPs. Moreover, these RTP polymer films can be used
for ratiometric oxygen detection due to their sensitive RTP emission
to oxygen. Remarkably, for the first time, these metal-free CPs demonstrate
significant phosphorescent signal amplification with a Stern–Volmer
quenching constant (KSV) value of up to
5.54 × 10–3 ppm–1, which
is 250 times higher than that of their molecule counterpart