Organic Photothermal Materials Obtained Using Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence Design Principles

Chemistry. 2024 Jan 16;30(4):e202302861. doi: 10.1002/chem.202302861. Epub 2023 Nov 28.

Abstract

Organic small molecules with high photothermal conversion efficiencies that absorb near-infrared light are desirable for photothermal therapy due to their improved biocompatibility compared to inorganic materials and their ability to absorb light in the biological transparency window (650-1350 nm). Here we report three donor-acceptor organic materials DM-ANDI, O-ANDI, and S-ANDI that show high photothermal conversion efficiencies of 46-68 % with near-infrared absorption. The design of these molecules is based on the rational modification of a thermally activated delayed fluorescence material to favour a low photoluminescence quantum yield by reducing HOMO-LUMO overlap. Encapsulating these materials into either neat nanoparticles or aggregated organic dots modulates their photothermal conversion efficiencies, and also facilitates dispersion in water.

Keywords: Donor-Acceptor Materials; Near-Infrared Absorbance; Phototheranostics; Photothermal Conversion; Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence.