
Correlation between the Intrinsic Photophysical Properties of the Spirobifluorene-Derived Monomer
Author(s) -
Jie Wang,
Dong Shi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.1c00262
Subject(s) - monomer , photoluminescence , parameterized complexity , molecule , materials science , quantum yield , derivative (finance) , optoelectronics , photochemistry , chemistry , optics , fluorescence , polymer , mathematics , organic chemistry , physics , composite material , algorithm , financial economics , economics
Spiro-molecules derived from the functional spirobifluorene core play important roles in the frontiers of diverse optoelectronics. The optoelectronics of these molecules have been intensively studied without yielding a knowledge base of precisely parameterized photophysical properties. Here, we report the precisely parameterized photophysics of spiro-OMeTAD, one prototypical optoelectronic spirobifluorene derivative. The use of a preobtained single-crystalline pure spiro-OMeTAD solid for the solution preparation allows for accurate determination of its molar absorption coefficient (ε) in its monomer form. A near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield (Φ L ∼ 99%) was observed from the monomer solution. The monomer's photoluminescence decay follows a mono-exponential channel that results in a lifetime (τ) of ∼ 1.64 ns. Taken together ε, Φ L , and τ correlate well via the Strickler-Berg equation. The Strickler-Berg relationship among the key photophysical properties determined on spiro-OMeTAD applies for spirobifluorene derivatives, as verified in an extended test on the newly created spiro-mF. Practical issues that may lead to misparameterized photophysical properties of these molecules are emphasized. Our results of the precisely parameterized photophysical properties of the spiro-OMeTAD monomer in dilute solution serve as background references for studying the optoelectronic processes in the technically more useful thin-film form in practical optoelectronic devices.