posted on 2020-06-15, 15:06authored byXiao Luo, Guijie Liang, Yaoyao Han, Yulu Li, Tao Ding, Shan He, Xue Liu, Kaifeng Wu
Triplet energy transfer from colloidal
nanocrystals is a novel
approach to sensitizing molecular triplets that are important for
many applications. Recent studies suggest that this triplet transfer
can be mediated by a hole transfer process when it is energetically
allowed. In contrast, electron-transfer-mediated triplet transfer
has not been observed yet, which is likely due to hole-trapping in
typical II–VI group nanocrystals inhibiting the hole transfer
step following initial electron transfer and hence disrupting a complete
triplet exciton transfer. Here we report electron-transfer-mediated
triplet energy transfer from CsPbCl3 and CsPbBr3 perovskite nanocrystals to surface-anchored rhodamine molecules.
The mechanism was unambiguously established by ultrafast spectroscopy;
control experiments using CdS nanocrystals also confirmed the role
of hole-trapping in inhibiting this mechanism. The sensitized rhodamine
triplets engaged in a variety of applications such as photon upconversion
and singlet oxygen generation. Compared to conventional one-step triplet
transfer, the electron-transfer-mediated mechanism is less demanding
in terms of interfacial electronic coupling and hence is more generally
implementable. Overall, this study not only establishes a complete
framework of triplet energy transfer across nanocrystal/molecule interfaces
but also greatly expands the scope of molecular triplet sensitization
using nanocrystals.