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Delayed Blue Fluorescence via Upper-Triplet State Crossing from C–C Bonded Donor–Acceptor Charge Transfer Molecules with Azatriangulene Cores
Author(s) -
Jonathan S. Ward,
Nadzeya A. Kukhta,
Paloma L. dos Santos,
Daniel G. Congrave,
Andrei S. Batsanov,
Andrew P. Monkman,
Martin R. Bryce
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b01184
Subject(s) - acceptor , molecule , singlet state , density functional theory , photochemistry , fluorescence , dihedral angle , heteroatom , triplet state , chemistry , materials science , chemical physics , computational chemistry , atomic physics , excited state , hydrogen bond , physics , ring (chemistry) , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , condensed matter physics
We report the synthesis and structural and photophysical characterization of two series of molecules with functionalized azatriangulene electron donor cores and three pendant electron acceptor units. The presented donor and acceptor units are joined by C-C bonds, instead of the usual C-heteroatom bonds often found in thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) emitters. The effects of the donor-acceptor strength and donor-acceptor dihedral angle on the emission properties are assessed. The data establish that the singlet-triplet energy gap is >0.3 eV and that delayed emission is present in only specific host matrices, irrespective of host polarity. Specific host behavior is atypical of many TADF materials, and we suggest the delayed emission in this work does not occur by a conventional vibronically coupled TADF mechanism, as the Δ E ST value is too large. Detailed photophysical analysis and supporting density functional theory calculations suggest that some presented azatriangulene molecules emit via an upper-triplet state crossing mechanism. This work highlights that several different mechanisms can be responsible for delayed emission, often with highly similar photophysics. Detailed photophysical analysis is required to establish which delayed emission mechanism is occurring. Our results also highlight a clear future direction toward vibronically coupled C-C bonded TADF materials.

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