“…In contrast, harvesting triplet excitons via room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) from the lowest triplet (T1) state to the ground (S0) state has become an attractive alternative approach. Recently, many design principles that rely on intra- and/or intermolecular interactions, − aggregates, , host–guest chemistry, excited-state engineering, halogen effect, ,, heavy chalcogen atom effect, and orthogonal donor–acceptor (D–A), ,,, biaryl, and donor–spacer–acceptor ,,− geometries have been developed. Nevertheless, a handful of reports comprising chemical modification, mechanical force, , conformational switching, intramolecular CT, regioisomeric effect on the excited state, and change of host matrices have recently observed simultaneous TADF and RTP. ,− Despite these achievements, structure–property correlation in simultaneous thermally enhanced phosphorescence (TEP) and its impact on TADF remain unclear due to fast internal conversion and the supersensitive nature of the triplet excitons.…”