Photoinduced On and Off Polymeric Room Temperature Phosphorescence Based On Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Isomers
As family members of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, compound anthracene (Ant) and phenanthrene (Phe) as isomers are widely used in organic optical materials and electronic materials. But their photochemical and physical properties are very different. In this work, the room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) properties of PVA?B?Ant and PVA?B?Phe are discussed carefully which are prepared by B?O click reaction through polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) with 9?anthraceneboronic acid (B?Ant) and 9?phenanthrenylboronic acid (B?Phe), respectively. PVA?B?Phe 1% film exhibits excellent fluorescence (FL) emission at 374 nm and RTP emission at 523 nm with green afterglow and around 1.9 s phosphorescence lifetime. However, PVA?B?Ant 1% film only shows strong blue FL emission at 414 nm, and the emission intensity decreases seriously with the extension of irradiation time. Experimental and theoretical calculations results suggest that the photodimer of Ant which is formed in PVA matrix under the UV light irradiation would be competitive with the process of RTP emission. This work demonstrates that the RTP properties of organic molecules might be probably affected by the photostability of the organic phosphor under UV irradiation.