- Modulation of Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence in Waterborne Polyurethanes via Charge-Transfer Effect.
Modulation of Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence in Waterborne Polyurethanes via Charge-Transfer Effect.
Here, we designed several waterborne polyurethanes (WPUs) with efficient thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) via serving charge-transfer (CT) states as a mediate bridge between singlet and triplet states to boost reverse intersystem crossing (RISC). By tuning substituents of diphenyl sulfone (DS), we found that O,O'- and S,S'-substituted DS covalently incorporated in WPUs solely show typical fluorescence emission with lifetimes in the nanosecond range. Interestingly, TADF appears by replacing the substituent with the nitrogen atom, of which lifetimes are up to ≈10 microseconds and ≈1 millisecond in air and vacuum, respectively, even though the energy gap between singlet and triplet states (ΔEST ) is still large for generating TADF. To explain this phenomenon, an energy level mode based on CT states and an 3 (n-π*) receiver state was proposed. By the rational modulation of CT states, it is possible to tune the ΔEST to render TADF-based materials suitable for versatile applications.