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Prolonged and efficient near-infrared photoluminescence of a sensitized organic ytterbium-containing molecular composite
Organic prolonged luminescent materials have attracted attention with various candidates reported providing both UV and visible emission for applications in bio-imaging, light storage, security, etc. However, there is a lack of prolonged near-infrared (NIR) emitting materials, which are highly desir...
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Published in: | Journal of materials chemistry. C, Materials for optical and electronic devices Materials for optical and electronic devices, 2020-07, Vol.8 (28), p.952-955 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Organic prolonged luminescent materials have attracted attention with various candidates reported providing both UV and visible emission for applications in bio-imaging, light storage, security,
etc.
However, there is a lack of prolonged near-infrared (NIR) emitting materials, which are highly desirable for many of the proposed applications. NIR-emitting organic lanthanide(
iii
) molecules have suitable wavelengths, but all of them are unsuitable for persistent luminescence due to weak sensitization and the restricted intrinsic ion radiative lifetimes. Herein, this paper demonstrates efficiently sensitized organic Yb(
iii
) compounds with prolonged emission lifetimes up to ∼0.3 s at 1 μm, far exceeding the intrinsic Yb
3+
emission lifetime of ∼1 ms. The dynamic equilibrium is studied to demonstrate that this prolonged emission is caused by energy transfer from long-lived organic triplet excitons. Experiment and simulation results suggest a new route to develop bright and ultralong-lived 1 μm emitting materials that could be coupled with other existing organic persistent luminescence materials to shift their emission in to the infrared.
A novel approach to sharp and persist NIR luminescence at 1 μm wavelength. |
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ISSN: | 2050-7526 2050-7534 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d0tc02075c |