Publication | Closed Access
Size-Dependent Spectroscopic Properties of Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles
130
Citations
41
References
2006
Year
Materials ScienceEngineeringNanomaterialsPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsSingle Polymer ChainsConjugated PolymersNanostructured PolymerConjugated PolymerPhysical ChemistryConjugated Polymer NanoparticlesPolymer PropertyTriplet-triplet AnnihilationChemistryBiophysicsPolymer Chemistry
This paper is focused on how the spectroscopic properties of conjugated polymers evolve in the size range between single polymer chains and the bulk material. The measurements used single-particle spectroscopy techniques and include both static and dynamic measurements. The main observation of this work is that the spectroscopic properties of MEH-PPV evolve rapidly as a function of nanoparticle size and achieve bulk-like properties for nanoparticles greater than 10 nm in size. Nanoparticles were assembled by a reprecipitation technique and characterized by fluorescence emission spectroscopy. The physical origin of the size-dependent spectroscopic properties is assigned to the distance dependence of four main processes: electronic energy transfer between blue and red sites, triplet-triplet annihilation, singlet exciton quenching by triplets, and singlet exciton quenching by hole polarons.
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