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The influence of molecular geometry on the efficiency of thermally activated delayed fluorescence

Nobuyasu, Roberto S.; Ward, Jonathan S.; Gibson, Jamie; Laidlaw, Beth A.; Ren, Zhongjie; Data, Przemyslaw; Batsanov, Andrei S.; Penfold, Thomas J.; Bryce, Martin R; Dias, Fernando B.

The influence of molecular geometry on the efficiency of thermally activated delayed fluorescence Thumbnail


Authors

Roberto S. Nobuyasu

Jonathan S. Ward

Jamie Gibson

Beth A. Laidlaw

Zhongjie Ren

Przemyslaw Data

Andrei S. Batsanov

Thomas J. Penfold

Martin R Bryce



Abstract

In this work we successfully developed a strategy for positively influencing the conformation of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) molecules containing phenothiazine as the electron donor (D) unit, and dibenzothiophene-S,S-dioxide as the acceptor (A), linked in D–A and D–A–D structures. In this strategy the effect of restricted molecular geometry is explored to maximize TADF emission. The presence of bulky substituents in different positions on the donor unit forces the molecules to adopt an axial conformer where the singlet charge transfer state is shifted to higher energy, resulting in the oscillator strength and luminescence efficiency decreasing. With bulky substituents on the acceptor unit, the molecules adopt an equatorial geometry, where the donor and acceptor units are locked in relative near-orthogonal geometry. In this case the individual signatures of the donor and acceptor units are evident in the absorption spectra, demonstrating that the substituent in the acceptor uncouples the electronic linkage between the donor and acceptor more effectively than with donor substitution. In contrast with the axial conformers that show very weak TADF, even with a small singlet triplet gap, molecules with equatorial geometry show stronger oscillator strength and luminescence efficiency and are excellent TADF emitters. Acceptor-substituted molecules 6 and 7 in particular show extremely high TADF efficiency in solution and solid film, even with a singlet–triplet energy gap around 0.2 eV. This extensive study provides important criteria for the design of novel TADF and room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) emitters with optimized geometry.

Citation

Nobuyasu, R. S., Ward, J. S., Gibson, J., Laidlaw, B. A., Ren, Z., Data, P., Batsanov, A. S., Penfold, T. J., Bryce, M. R., & Dias, F. B. (2019). The influence of molecular geometry on the efficiency of thermally activated delayed fluorescence. Journal of Materials Chemistry C Materials for optical and electronic devices, 7(22), 6672-6684. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9tc00720b

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 3, 2019
Online Publication Date May 29, 2019
Publication Date Jun 14, 2019
Deposit Date May 7, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jun 12, 2019
Journal Journal of Materials Chemistry C Materials for optical and electronic devices
Print ISSN 2050-7526
Electronic ISSN 2050-7534
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 22
Pages 6672-6684
DOI https://doi.org/10.1039/c9tc00720b
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1302443

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