Abstract

Microwave induced delayed phosphorescence (MIDP) experiments have been performed to study the populating and decay of the phosphorescent triplet state T 0 of seven aromatic three-ring molecules : anthracene (-h 10, -h 2d8, and -d10), acridine (-h9 and -d9) and phenazine (-h8 and -d8), all diluted in biphenyl crystals. We chose these molecules because the deactivation of T 0 goes dominantly via radiationless processes and the total decay rates of the individual spin components of T 0 determined in the experiment thus equal the radiationless decay rates. The phosphorescence emission, used as a monitor for the triplet state population, here gives an insignificant contribution to the decay. MIDP experiments only yield the true decay rates if thermal isolation between the levels is maintained throughout, and the present investigations, in which the intensity of excitation has been varied over a wide range, uncover a possible source of systematic error that has been overlooked thus far. The principal results of...

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