4.6 Article

Room-temperature white and color-tunable afterglow by manipulating multi-mode triplet emissions

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages 3257-3263

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0tc05816e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21704002]
  2. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [2182054]
  3. Big Science Project from BUCT [XK180301]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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By manipulating multi-mode triplet emissions from a single purely organic phosphorescence molecule, room-temperature persistent white afterglow and green afterglow were successfully achieved. The two organic isomers exhibit different emission components leading to distinct afterglow colors.
Herein, we succeed in achieving room-temperature persistent white afterglow by manipulating multi-mode triplet emissions from a single purely organic phosphorescence molecule. Two D-A-A '-D type organic isomers pDCzPyCN and oDCzPyCN are designed and synthesized, with two carbazolyls as the donors and pyridine and a cyanogroup as the acceptors. Amazingly, oDCzPyCN and pDCzPyCN manifest white afterglow and green afterglow at room temperature, which lasts for over 3 s and 2 s, respectively. The white afterglow of oDCzPyCN is made up of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) (455 nm, similar to 90 ms), distinguishable thermally activated delayed phosphorescence (TADP) (483 nm) and organic ultralong phosphorescence (OURTP) from the intermolecular interaction-stabilized triplet state (T-1*) (542 nm and 592 nm, similar to 240 ms). The calculated CIEx,y chromaticity coordinates are (0.30, 0.35) in the white-light zone. The green afterglow of pDCzPyCN contains TADF (475 nm, similar to 51 ms), TADP from the lowest molecular triplet state (T-1) released from T-1* (490 nm, similar to 55 ms), and weak T-1* emission (542 nm and 592 nm, similar to 46 ms and similar to 49 ms). Fascinatingly, both isomers adopt the unique multi-mode triplet emission mechanism but different emission components play a leading role in the final afterglow for each isomer, leading to the different afterglow colors. Single crystal analyses and TD-DFT calculations evidence the T-1* phosphorescence. Temperature-dependent experiments validate the TADF and TADP of pDCzPyCN and oDCzPyCN. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that the afterglow color has been tuned and single component white afterglow has been finally realized by manipulating multi-mode triplet emissions. This work will help gain deep insight into the mechanism for organic afterglow and extend its application scope.

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