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"Impurity"-driven tunable organic room temperature phosphorescence via conformational regulation in multi host/guest systems.

PubMed
Authors: Dutta A, Singh U, Pati SK, Maitra U

Year

2026

Paper ID

30266

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

262

Citations

2

Abstract

The presence of trace amounts of impurities can have unprecedented effects on the luminescence features of organic room temperature phosphorescent (ORTP) materials, requiring conscientious investigation. In this study, we have compared the photoluminescence properties of biphenyl-4-carboxylic acid (BCA) and biphenyl-4,4'-dicarboxylic acid (BDCA), synthesized two distinct synthetic routes-Friedel-Crafts (FC-BCA or FC-BDCA) and cross-coupling (cc-BCA or cc-BDCA) pathways and observed remarkable orange phosphorescence in FC-BCA or FC-BDCA which was absent in cc-BCA or cc-BDCA. Our investigations identified traces (<0.3 mol%) of diphenylbenzil based impurities, formed as byproducts during Friedel-Crafts acylation of biphenyl, responsible for the RTP activation in FC-BCA or FC-BDCA. Bicomponent solids prepared by deliberately doping traces of DPB into various organic matrices ensued tunable RTP color (green to red) with high quantum yield (26.4%) and a lifetime of up to 1.6 ms. Comprehensive experimental investigations substantiated with theoretical studies revealed that photoexcited conformational dynamics of guest DPB are responsible for RTP color variation concertedly involving multiple energy transfer channels, , singlet-to-singlet (SSET) and triplet-to-triplet (TTET). It presents a novel trace doping strategy for developing RTP materials with tunable optical features by synergistically controlling the ground and excited state geometries of a single guest molecule, which is rarely reported in the literature. Furthermore, by employing a suitable host matrix, we successfully stabilized a linear conformer of guest DPB in the ground state, which is otherwise unstable, and resulted in improved quantum yield. Simultaneously, we report unusual RTP from commercial BDCA, which we suspect to be caused by the presence of diphenylbenzil-based impurities, reiteratively emphasizing the importance of exercising caution whenever a system exhibits unusual properties.

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  • The presence of trace amounts of impurities can have unprecedented effects on the luminescence features of organic room temperature phosphorescent (ORTP) materials, requiring...

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Current Paper #30266 #68465 Bounding Eigenstate Overlap fro... #68440 Classical State Preparation for... #68437 Transition-state lattice modes ... #68423 Selective Fermi-Level Pinning: ...

External citation index: OpenAlex citation signal • updated 2026-06-09 19:53:30

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