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Bidhan Chandra Garain

Bio: Bidhan Chandra Garain is an academic researcher from Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phosphorescence & Phosphor. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 21 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an organic-inorganic supramolecular scaffolding strategy was used to achieve the highest quantum yield solution phase room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from organic phosphors.
Abstract: Solution phase room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from organic phosphors is seldom realized. Herein we report one of the highest quantum yield solution state RTP (ca. 41.8 %) in water, from a structurally simple phthalimide phosphor, by employing an organic-inorganic supramolecular scaffolding strategy. We further use these supramolecular hybrid phosphors as a light-harvesting scaffold to achieve delayed fluorescence from orthogonally anchored Sulforhodamine acceptor dyes via an efficient triplet to singlet Forster resonance energy transfer (TS-FRET), which is rarely achieved in solution. Electrostatic cross-linking of the inorganic scaffold at higher concentrations further facilitates the formation of self-standing hydrogels with efficient RTP and energy-transfer mediated long-lived fluorescence.

93 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an air-stable triplet harvest from simple, heavy-atom substituted pyromellitic diimide derivatives in amorphous matrix and crystalline state is reported, where multiple intermolecular halogen bonding interactions among these phosphors, such as halogen-carbonyl and halogenπ resulted in the modulation of phosphorescence, cyan emission from monomeric state and orange-red emission from its aggregated state, to yield twin RTP emission.
Abstract: Arylene diimide derived ambient organic phosphors are seldom reported despite their potential structural characteristics to facilitate the triplet harvesting. In this context, highly efficient room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from simple, heavy-atom substituted pyromellitic diimide derivatives in amorphous matrix and crystalline state is reported here. Multiple intermolecular halogen bonding interactions among these phosphors, such as halogen-carbonyl and halogen-π resulted in the modulation of phosphorescence, cyan emission from monomeric state and orange-red emission from its aggregated state, to yield twin RTP emission. Remarkably, the air-stable phosphorescence presented here own one of the highest quantum yield (≈48 %) among various organics in orange-red emissive region.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
11 Jan 2022
TL;DR:
Abstract: Chiral organic phosphors with circularly polarized room temperature phosphorescence (CPP) provide new prospects to the realm of circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) materials, owing to the long-lived triplet states and persistent emission. Although several molecular designs show efficient room temperature phosphorescence (RTP), realization of ambient organic CPP remains a formidable challenge. Herein, we introduce a chiral bischromophoric phosphor design to realize ambient CPP emission by appending molecular phosphors to chiral diaminocyclohexane core. Thus, solution processable polymer films of the trans -1,2-diaminocyclohexane (DAC) chiral cores with heavy-atom substituted pyromellitic diimide phosphors, exhibits one of the most efficient exclusive CPP emission with high phosphorescence quantum yield (~18% in air and 46% under vacuum) and significant luminescence dissymmetry factor (|g lum | ~ 4.0 x 10 -3 ).

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a donor core-substituted pyromellitic diimide (acceptor) derivative was reported as an efficient charge-transfer molecular design from the arylene diimides family as a triplet emitter.
Abstract: Triplet harvesting under ambient conditions plays a crucial role in improving the luminescence efficiency of purely organic molecular systems. This requires elegant molecular designs that can harvest triplets either via room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) or by thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF). In this context, here we report a donor core-substituted pyromellitic diimide (acceptor) derivative as an efficient charge-transfer molecular design from the arylene diimide family as a triplet emitter. Solution-processed thin films of carbazole-substituted CzPhPmDI display both RTP- and TADF-mediated twin emission with a long lifetime and high efficiency under ambient conditions. The present study not only sheds light on the fundamental photophysical process involved in the triplet harvesting of donor-acceptor organic systems, but also opens new avenues in exploring an arylene diimide class of molecules as potential organic light-emitting materials.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a boron-based donor-spiro-acceptor organic chromophore with delayed fluorescence was investigated, and it was shown that the rISC process from the T1 state to the S1 state can be enhanced by the presence of a nearby local excited triplet state (i.e., T2 state here).
Abstract: Intersystem crossing and reverse intersystem crossing (rISC) processes were investigated in a boron-based donor-spiro-acceptor organic chromophore which shows thermally activated delayed fluorescence. Due to the perpendicular arrangement between donor and acceptor moieties, the HOMO and the LUMO are spatially separated, and the compound shows charge transfer (CT) transitions. We found both S1 and T1 excited states are CT in nature (i.e., electron and hole wave functions are localized on acceptor and donor units, respectively) and T2, which is higher in energy than S1 and T1, is locally excited in nature (i.e., both electron and hole wave functions are localized on an acceptor unit). Because of the same nature of excitation (i.e., CT here), the spin-orbit coupling matrix element between S1 and T1 is very low and insignificant exciton conversion occurs from the T1 state to the S1 state (and vice versa). Our combined time-dependent density functional theory and quantum dynamics simulation shows that the rISC process from the T1 state to the S1 state can be enhanced by the presence of a nearby local excited triplet state (i.e., T2 state here). A smaller gap between the T1 and T2 states efficiently establishes the rISC route.

7 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an organic-inorganic supramolecular scaffolding strategy was used to achieve the highest quantum yield solution phase room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from organic phosphors.
Abstract: Solution phase room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from organic phosphors is seldom realized. Herein we report one of the highest quantum yield solution state RTP (ca. 41.8 %) in water, from a structurally simple phthalimide phosphor, by employing an organic-inorganic supramolecular scaffolding strategy. We further use these supramolecular hybrid phosphors as a light-harvesting scaffold to achieve delayed fluorescence from orthogonally anchored Sulforhodamine acceptor dyes via an efficient triplet to singlet Forster resonance energy transfer (TS-FRET), which is rarely achieved in solution. Electrostatic cross-linking of the inorganic scaffold at higher concentrations further facilitates the formation of self-standing hydrogels with efficient RTP and energy-transfer mediated long-lived fluorescence.

93 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the covalent linkage of phosphorescent chromophore of arylboronic acid and polymer matrix of poly(vinylalcohol) was shown to be a kind of stimulus-responsive room temperature phosphorescence materials.
Abstract: Abstract Many luminescent stimuli responsive materials are based on fluorescence emission, while stimuli-responsive room temperature phosphorescent materials are less explored. Here, we show a kind of stimulus-responsive room temperature phosphorescence materials by the covalent linkage of phosphorescent chromophore of arylboronic acid and polymer matrix of poly(vinylalcohol). Attributed to the rigid environment offered from hydrogen bond and B-O covalent bond between arylboronic acid and poly(vinylalcohol), the yielded polymer film exhibits ultralong room temperature phosphorescence with lifetime of 2.43 s and phosphorescence quantum yield of 7.51%. Interestingly, the RTP property of this film is sensitive to the water and heat stimuli, because water could destroy the hydrogen bonds between adjacent poly(vinylalcohol) polymers, then changing the rigidity of this system. Furthermore, by introducing another two fluorescent dyes to this system, the color of afterglow with stimulus response effect could be adjusted from blue to green to orange through triplet-to-singlet Förster-resonance energy-transfer. Finally, due to the water/heat-sensitive, multicolor and completely aqueous processable feature for these three afterglow hybrids, they are successfully applied in multifunctional ink for anti-counterfeit, screen printing and fingerprint record.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a series of fluorescent naphthalimides, which did not originally show observable phosphorescence in solution, as aggregates, in polymer films, or in any other tested host material, including heavy-atom matrices at cryogenic temperatures, can now efficiently produce ultralong RTP (ϕ=0.17, τ=243 ms) in phthalimide hosts.
Abstract: Manipulation of long-lived triplet excitons in organic molecules is key to applications including next-generation optoelectronics, background-free bioimaging, information encryption, and photodynamic therapy. However, for organic room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP), which stems from triplet excitons, it is still difficult to simultaneously achieve efficiency and lifetime enhancement on account of weak spin-orbit coupling and rapid nonradiative transitions, especially in the red and near-infrared region. Herein, we report that a series of fluorescent naphthalimides-which did not originally show observable phosphorescence in solution, as aggregates, in polymer films, or in any other tested host material, including heavy-atom matrices at cryogenic temperatures-can now efficiently produce ultralong RTP (ϕ=0.17, τ=243 ms) in phthalimide hosts. Notably, red RTP (λRTP =628 nm) is realized at a molar ratio of less than 10 parts per billion, demonstrating an unprecedentedly low guest-to-host ratio where efficient RTP can take place in molecular solids.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the covalent linkage of phosphorescent chromophore of arylboronic acid and polymer matrix of poly(vinylalcohol) was shown to be a kind of stimulus-responsive room temperature phosphorescence materials.
Abstract: Abstract Many luminescent stimuli responsive materials are based on fluorescence emission, while stimuli-responsive room temperature phosphorescent materials are less explored. Here, we show a kind of stimulus-responsive room temperature phosphorescence materials by the covalent linkage of phosphorescent chromophore of arylboronic acid and polymer matrix of poly(vinylalcohol). Attributed to the rigid environment offered from hydrogen bond and B-O covalent bond between arylboronic acid and poly(vinylalcohol), the yielded polymer film exhibits ultralong room temperature phosphorescence with lifetime of 2.43 s and phosphorescence quantum yield of 7.51%. Interestingly, the RTP property of this film is sensitive to the water and heat stimuli, because water could destroy the hydrogen bonds between adjacent poly(vinylalcohol) polymers, then changing the rigidity of this system. Furthermore, by introducing another two fluorescent dyes to this system, the color of afterglow with stimulus response effect could be adjusted from blue to green to orange through triplet-to-singlet Förster-resonance energy-transfer. Finally, due to the water/heat-sensitive, multicolor and completely aqueous processable feature for these three afterglow hybrids, they are successfully applied in multifunctional ink for anti-counterfeit, screen printing and fingerprint record.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , a stepwise Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) for a bright NIR system with remarkable persistent luminescence (up to 0.2 s at 810 nm) is presented, based on a new triphenylene-dye-doped polymer (triphenylene 2−ylboronic acid@poly(vinyl alcohol) (TP@PVA)) with a persistent blue phosphorescence of 3.29 s.
Abstract: Organic near infrared (NIR) persistent‐luminescence systems with bright and long‐lived emission are highly valuable for applications in communication, imaging, and sensors. However, realizing these materials (especially lifetime over 0.1 s) is a challenge, mainly because of non‐radiative quenching of their long‐lived excitons. Herein, a universal strategy of stepwise Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) for a bright NIR system with remarkable persistent luminescence (up to 0.2 s at 810 nm) is presented, based on a new triphenylene‐dye‐doped polymer (triphenylene‐2‐ylboronic acid@poly(vinyl alcohol) (TP@PVA)) with a persistent blue phosphorescence of 3.29 s. This persistent NIR luminescence is demonstrated for application not only in NIR anti‐counterfeiting but also NIR bioimaging with penetrating a piece of skin as thick as 2.0 mm. By co‐doping a red dye (such as Nile red) and an NIR dye Cyanine 7 (Cy7) into this doped PVA film, the shortage of spectral overlap between TP emission and Cy7 absorbance is successfully solved, through a stepwise FRET process involving triplet to singlet (TS)‐FRET from TP to the intermediate red dye and then singlet to singlet (SS)‐FRET to Cy7. It is noted that the efficiency of the upper TS‐FRET is enhanced significantly by the lower SS‐FRET, leading to high efficiencies for the continuous FRETs.

52 citations