posted on 2022-08-09, 19:40authored byD. K.
Andrea Phan Huu, Sangeeth Saseendran, Rama Dhali, Larissa Gomes Franca, Kleitos Stavrou, Andrew Monkman, Anna Painelli
We present a detailed and comprehensive picture of the
photophysics
of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF). The approach relies
on a few-state model, parametrized ab initio on a
prototypical TADF dye, that explicitly accounts for the nonadiabatic
coupling between electrons and vibrational and conformational motion,
crucial to properly address (reverse) intersystem crossing rates.
The Onsager model is exploited to account for the medium polarity
and polarizability, with careful consideration of the different time
scales of relevant degrees of freedom. TADF photophysics is then quantitatively
addressed in a coherent and exhaustive approach that accurately reproduces
the complex temporal evolution of emission spectra in liquid solvents
as well as in solid organic matrices. The different rigidity of the
two environments is responsible for the appearance in matrices of
important inhomogeneous broadening phenomena that are ascribed to
the intertwined contribution from (quasi)static conformational and
dielectric disorder.