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      Carbazole isomers induce ultralong organic phosphorescence

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d5010026e144">Commercial carbazole has been widely used to synthesize organic functional materials that have led to recent breakthroughs in ultralong organic phosphorescence1, thermally activated delayed fluorescence2,3, organic luminescent radicals4 and organic semiconductor lasers5. However, the impact of low-concentration isomeric impurities present within commercial batches on the properties of the synthesized molecules requires further analysis. Here, we have synthesized highly pure carbazole and observed that its fluorescence is blueshifted by 54 nm with respect to commercial samples and its room-temperature ultralong phosphorescence almost disappears6. We discover that such differences are due to the presence of a carbazole isomeric impurity in commercial carbazole sources, with concentrations &lt;0.5 mol%. Ten representative carbazole derivatives synthesized from the highly pure carbazole failed to show the ultralong phosphorescence reported in the literature1,7-15. However, the phosphorescence was recovered by adding 0.1 mol% isomers, which act as charge traps. Investigating the role of the isomers may therefore provide alternative insights into the mechanisms behind ultralong organic phosphorescence1,6-18. </p>

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          A New Long Phosphorescent Phosphor with High Brightness, SrAl[sub 2]O[sub 4]:Eu[sup 2+],Dy[sup 3+]

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            Enhancing the performance of pure organic room-temperature phosphorescent luminophores

            Once considered the exclusive property of metal complexes, the phenomenon of room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) has been increasingly realized in pure organic luminophores recently. Using precise molecular design and synthetic approaches to modulate their weak spin–orbit coupling, highly active triplet excitons, and ultrafast deactivation, organic luminophores can be endowed with long-lived and bright RTP characteristics. This has sparked intense explorations into organic luminophores with enhanced RTP features for different applications. This Review discusses the fundamental mechanism of RTP in pure organic luminophores, followed by design principles, enhancement strategies, and formulation methods to achieve highly phosphorescent and long-lived organic RTP luminophores even in aqueous media. The current challenges and future directions of this field are also discussed in the summary and outlook.
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              Organic Nanocrystals with Bright Red Persistent Room-Temperature Phosphorescence for Biological Applications

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Nature Materials
                Nat. Mater.
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1476-1122
                1476-4660
                September 21 2020
                Article
                10.1038/s41563-020-0797-2
                32958877
                bd5a265d-f745-4cd1-bd84-05164f44afca
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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