The quantum efficiencies of conjugated
polymers, which have long
been a bottleneck barring their broad optoelectronic applications,
are found to be increasing dramatically when the chain-like molecules
are stretched into a state of confinement over molecular motions.
For pristine MEH-PPV molecules, the stretching-induced confinement
becomes effective as the segmental stress (σ) has passed a threshold
of ∼100 MPa, overcoming the interventions from molecular aggregates,
to cause thereafter an increase of quantum efficiency from 6%, almost
linearly with σ, to 55% at σ ∼ 215 MPa. By using
ultrafast time-resolved confocal spectroscopy, the efficiency increase
is revealed arising from suppression of backbone torsion-mediated
self-trapping that is normally occurring within ∼2 picosecond
following excitation. The dependence on backbone stresses strongly
suggests a significant role of lattice strain energy during photoexcitation,
implicating the basic understanding of the energy transformation as
well as applications of conjugated polymers.
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