Thermally activated delayed fluorescence as a cycling process between excited singlet and triplet states: application to the fullerenes.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe Journal of chemical physics
Year 2007
In efficient thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) the excited chromophore alternates randomly between the singlet and triplet manifolds a large number of times before emission occurs. In this work, the average number of cycles n is obtained and is shown to have a simple experimental meaning: n+1 is the intensification factor of the prompt fluorescence intensity, owing to the occurrence of TADF. A new method of data analysis for the determination of the quantum yield of triplet formation, combining steady-state and time-resolved data in a single plot, is also presented. Application of the theoretical results to the TADF of [70]fullerenes shows a general good agreement between different methods of fluorescence analysis and allows the determination of several photophysical parameters.
Epistemonikos ID: 221968913d0308550d3f40a7c9db6f77c8f5048b
First added on: Sep 14, 2023