Issue 43, 2022

Long-lived room temperature phosphorescence from amorphous non-traditional intrinsic clusteroluminescence polymers

Abstract

Non-traditional intrinsic clusteroluminescence (CL) polymers with persistent room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) properties have recently attracted considerable attention owing to the availability of versatile preparation methods and their excellent processability. Herein, a series of poly(styrene-alt-maleic anhydride) (PSMA) hydrolysates with blue fluorescence and green RTP were prepared. The experimental results show that the through-space n–π interaction (TSI-n–π) among intra-/intermolecular carbonyl groups is generated through the induction of hydrogen bonding or ionic bonding, which is the underlying cause of RTP emission. The transition from excitation-dependent emission (EDE) to excitation-independent emission (EIE) with decreasing concentrations indicates that the TSI-n–π of adjacent carbonyls in PSMA-H and hydrolyzed polymaleic anhydride solutions dominates the CL. Theoretical calculations further demonstrate that the phenyl group can induce the aggregation of adjacent carbonyl groups to produce TSI-n–π in the single molecule state, but it does not participate in the carbonyl cluster. This work affords a platform for revealing the nature of CL and TSIs and provides a simple and practical synthetic route for the preparation of RTP materials.

Graphical abstract: Long-lived room temperature phosphorescence from amorphous non-traditional intrinsic clusteroluminescence polymers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Sep 2022
Accepted
06 Oct 2022
First published
06 Oct 2022

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2022,10, 16420-16429

Long-lived room temperature phosphorescence from amorphous non-traditional intrinsic clusteroluminescence polymers

K. Chen, Y. Wang, B. Chu, Z. Yan, H. Li, H. Zhang, S. Hu, Y. Yang, B. Liu and X. Zhang, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2022, 10, 16420 DOI: 10.1039/D2TC03754H

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