Abstract
In recent years, organic long persistent luminescence (OLPL) materials have achieved a big breakthrough of hour-level long persistent luminescence (LPL) through the charge-separation mechanism in host-guest composites. However, it is still much challenging for OLPL materials to realize such performance using the common cheap optoelectronic inert polymers as the host component. In this work, the electron-deficient naphthalenediimide derivatives as guests are dispersed into a variety of polymers, and hour-level LPL is achieved for the first time in the common cheap optoelectronic inert poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA), poly(vinyl acetate) (PVAc) and polystyrene (PS) hosts. By compositing the common commercial-available PMMA and polycarbonate (PC) together, an unprecedent week-level LPL is observed. Cascade polymer hole trap mechanism is proposed for such unprecedent LPL performance. This innovation paves the way for OLPL materials to replace the commercial inorganic materials in the future.
Supplementary materials
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Supplementary Materials
Description
Materials and methods, synthetic procedures, transient spectra, delay spectra, UV-visible absorp-tion spectra, LPL decay curves, LPL spectra, excitation spectra, absorbance decay curves, electrostatic potential (ESP), Front molecular orbitals (FMOs), electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra, CIE coordi-nate plots and 1H NMR of molecules (PDF).
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Title
Supporting Movie S1
Description
Thermal release process of TMP-NDI@PMMA film.
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Title
Supporting Movie S2
Description
Thermal release process of TMP-NDI@PMMA/PC film.
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