posted on 2024-09-19, 14:38authored byPaloma Lays dos Santos, Daniel de Sa Pereira, Chan Seok Oh, Nadzeya Kukhta, Ha Lim Lee, Jun Yeob Lee, Andrew P. Monkman
In this work, we look into the detailed photophysical
characterization
of a multidonor–acceptor (D-A) family of thermally
activated delayed fluorescent (TADF) emitters to find correlations
with their device performance. Increasing the number of closely packed Ds around the A core leads to changes in dihedral
angles between Ds and A, affecting the highest
occupied molecular orbital (HOMO)/lowest unpccupied molecualar orbital
(LUMO) separation and impacting the singlet–triplet energy
gaps. Moreover, D-A dihedral angles change molecular
conjugation affecting the spread of charge-transfer state energies
as well as the energy of D local triplet states. The
coupling between these triplet states and the dispersion in CT states
lead to the appearance of multiple rISC channels, a phenomenon that
is host-dependent, i.e., hosts with different rigidities twist the
dihedral angles differently. We show that different subsets of rISC
rates directly impact device performance, where faster rISC leads
to external quantum efficiencies above 20% while slower rISC rates
act as parasitic traps, severely affecting device roll-off. This explains
why emitters with excellent peak external quantum efficiencies can
also present very poor roll-off.