A facile and green mechanosynthesis strategy free of solvent and high reaction temperature was developed to fabricate highly emissive cesium lead halide perovskite (CsPbX) quantum dots (QDs). Their composition can be adjusted conveniently simply through mechanically milling/grinding stoichiometric combinations of raw reagents, thereby introducing a broad luminescence tunability of the product with adjustable wavelength, line width, and photoluminescence quantum yield. Desired CsPbX QDs "library" can thus be readily constructed in a way like assembling Lego building blocks. Hence, the method offered new avenues in the preparation of multicomponent cocrystals, adding one appealing apparatus to the tool box of perovskite-type QDs synthesis. Intriguingly, photoinduced dynamic study revealed the hole-transfer process of the as-prepared QDs toward electron donors, indicative of their potential in charge-transfer-based applications such as light-harvesting devices and photocatalysis.
Previous studies of perylenediimides (PDIs) mostly utilized the lowest singlet excited state S1 . Generation of a triplet excited state (T1 ) in PDIs is important for applications ranging from photodynamic therapy to photovoltaics; however, it remains a formidable task. Herein, we developed a heavy-atom-free strategy to prompt the T1 ←S1 intersystem crossing (ISC) by introducing electron-donating aryl (Ar) groups at the head positions of an electron-deficient perylenediimide (PDI) core. We found that the ISC efficiency increases from 8 to 54 % and then to 86 % by increasing the electron-donating ability of head-substituted aryl groups from phenyl (p-PDI) to methoxyphenyl (MeO-PDI) and then to methylthioxyphenyl (MeS-PDI). By enhancing the intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) interaction from p-PDI to MeO-PDI, and then to MeS-PDI, singlet oxygen generation via energy-transfer reactions from T1 of PDIs to (3)O2 was demonstrated with the highest yield of up to 80 %. These results provide guidelines for developing new triplet-generating PDIs and related rylene diimides for optoelectronic applications.
Organic solid-state lasers (OSSLs) have been a topic of intensive investigations. Perylenediimide (PDI) derivatives are widely used in organic thin-film transistors and solar cells. However, OSSLs based on neat PDIs have not been achieved yet, owing to the formation of H-aggregates and excimer trap-states. Here, we demonstrated the first PDI-based OSSL from whispering-gallery mode (WGM) hexagonal microdisk (hMD) microcavity of N,N'-bis(1-ethylpropyl)-2,5,8,11-tetrakis(p-methyl-phenyl)-perylenediimide (mp-PDI) self-assembled from solution. Single-crystal data reveal that mp-PDI molecules stack into a loosely packed twisted brickstone arrangement, resulting in J-type aggregates that exhibit a solid-state photoluminescence (PL) efficiency φ > 15%. Moreover, we found that exciton-vibration coupling in J-aggregates leads to an exceptional ultrafast radiative decay, which reduces the exciton diffusion length, in turn, suppresses bimolecular exciton annihilation (bmEA) process. These spectral features, plus the optical feedback provided by WGM-hMD microcavity, enable the observation of multimode lasing as evidenced by nonlinear output, spectral narrowing, and temporal coherence of laser emission. With consideration of high carrier-mobility associated with PDIs, hMDs of mp-PDI are attractive candidates on the way to achieve electrically driven OSSL.
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