Nature Communications (May 2024)

Stretchable phosphorescent polymers by multiphase engineering

  • Nan Gan,
  • Xin Zou,
  • Zhao Qian,
  • Anqi Lv,
  • Lan Wang,
  • Huili Ma,
  • Hu-Jun Qian,
  • Long Gu,
  • Zhongfu An,
  • Wei Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47673-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Stretchable phosphorescence materials potentially enable applications in diverse advanced fields in wearable electronics. However, achieving room-temperature phosphorescence materials simultaneously featuring long-lived emission and good stretchability is challenging because it is hard to balance the rigidity and flexibility in the same polymer. Here we present a multiphase engineering for obtaining stretchable phosphorescent materials by combining stiffness and softness simultaneously in well-designed block copolymers. Due to the microphase separation, copolymers demonstrate an intrinsic stretchability of 712%, maintaining an ultralong phosphorescence lifetime of up to 981.11 ms. This multiphase engineering is generally applicable to a series of binary and ternary initiator systems with color-tunable phosphorescence in the visible range. Moreover, these copolymers enable multi-level volumetric data encryption and stretchable afterglow display. This work provides a fundamental understanding of the nanostructures and material properties for designing stretchable materials and extends the potential of phosphorescence polymers.