| Literature DB >> 28714219 |
Suzhi Cai1, Huifang Shi1,2, Jiewei Li1, Long Gu1, Yun Ni1, Zhichao Cheng1, Shan Wang1, Wei-Wei Xiong1, Lin Li1, Zhongfu An1, Wei Huang1,2.
Abstract
Visible light is much more available and less harmful than ultraviolet light, but ultralong organic phosphorescence (UOP) with visible-light excitation remains a formidable challenge. Here, a concise chemical approach is provided to obtain bright UOP by tuning the molecular packing in the solid state under irradiation of available visible light, e.g., a cell phone flashlight under ambient conditions (room temperature and in air). The excitation spectra exhibit an obvious redshift via the incorporation of halogen atoms to tune intermolecular interactions. UOP is achieved through H-aggregation to stabilize the excited triplet state, with a high phosphorescence efficiency of 8.3% and a considerably long lifetime of 0.84 s. Within a brightness of 0.32 mcd m-2 that can be recognized by the naked eye, UOP can last for 104 s in total. Given these features, ultralong organic phosphorescent materials are used to successfully realize dual data encryption and decryption. Moreover, well-dispersed UOP nanoparticles are prepared by polymer-matrix encapsulation in an aqueous solution, and their applications in bioimaging are tentatively being studied. This result will pave the way toward expanding metal-free organic phosphorescent materials and their applications.Entities:
Keywords: bioimaging; data encryption; intermolecular interaction; organic phosphorescence; visible-light excitation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28714219 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201701244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849