手机片img class="sj_xl" src="//www.znpla.com/bicchina/v2images/xia.png"/>

扫一扫,手机访问

关于我们 加入收藏

美国布鲁克海文仪器公司上海代表处

7 平/span>金牌会员

已认?/p>

拨打电话
获取底价
提交后,商家将派代表为您专人服务
立即发?/a>
当前位置9/div> 布鲁克海斆/a>> 技术文竟/a>>

Effect of Swelling on Multiple Energy Transfer in Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles

Effect of Swelling on Multiple Energy Transfer in Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles

Department of Chemistry, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina 29634, United States

Department of Chemistry, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, United States

§Department of Molecular and Cellular Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77845, United States

摘要9/span>Many key processes in conjugated polymers are strongly influenced by multiple energy transfer (i.e., exciton diffusion). We investigated the effect of solvent-induced swelling on the kinetics of multiple energy transfer in nanoparticles of the conjugated polymers PFBT and MEH-PPV. Multiple energy transfer between equivalent chromophores results in an increased rate of quenching by defects due to a cascading or funneling effect. The effects of swelling on energy transfer between polymer chromophores and the resulting exciton dynamics were modeled using a random walk on a lattice of chromophores. The simulation results show good agreement with experimental fluorescence quantum yield, and decay kinetics results at low to moderate THF concentrations. We found that the time scale for energy transfer between chromophores (∻/span>5 ps for MEH-PPV nanoparticles and∻/span>100 ps for PFBT nanoparticles) is highly sensitive to swelling, slowing by an order of magnitude or more for swelled particles. The results support quenching by defects or polarons, amplified by multiple energy transfer or a cascade effect, as a likely explanation for the typically low fluorescence quantum yield of conjugated polymer particles as compared to the free polymer in solution as well as similar effects observed in thin films.


虚拟号将秒后失效

使用微信扫码拨号

为了保证隐私安全,平台已启用虚拟电话,请放心拨打(暂不支持短信)