Shun
Kimura
ab,
Shojiro
Kimura
c,
Ken
Kato
d,
Yoshio
Teki
*d,
Hiroshi
Nishihara
*be and
Tetsuro
Kusamoto
*af
aDepartment of Life and Coordination-Complex Molecular Science, Institute for Molecular Science, 5-1 Higashiyama, Myodaiji, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8787, Japan. E-mail: kusamoto@ims.ac.jp
bDepartment of Chemistry, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-0033, Japan. E-mail: nisihara@rs.tus.ac.jp
cInstitute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, 2-1-1 Katahira, Aoba-ku, Sendai, 980-8577, Japan
dDivision of Molecular Materials Science, Graduate School of Science, Osaka City University, 3-3-138 Sugimoto, Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka, 558-8585, Japan. E-mail: teki@sci.osaka-cu.ac.jp
eResearch Center for Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science, 2641 Yamazaki, Noda, Chiba 278-8510, Japan
fSOKENDAI (The Graduate University for Advanced Studies), Shonan Village, Hayama, 240-0193, Kanagawa, Japan
First published on 5th January 2021
Organic radicals are an emerging class of luminophores possessing multiplet spin states and potentially showing spin-luminescence correlated properties. We investigated the mechanism of recently reported magnetic field sensitivity in the emission of a photostable luminescent radical, (3,5-dichloro-4-pyridyl)bis(2,4,6-trichlorophenyl)methyl radical (PyBTM) doped into host αH-PyBTM molecular crystals. The magnetic field (0–14 T), temperature (4.2–20 K), and the doping concentration (0.1, 4, 10, and 22 wt%) dependence on the time-resolved emission were examined by measuring emission decays of the monomer and excimer. Quantum mechanical simulations on the decay curves disclosed the role of the magnetic field; it dominantly affects the spin sublevel population of radical dimers in the ground states. This situation is distinctly different from that in conventional closed-shell luminophores, where the magnetic field modulates their excited-state spin multiplicity. Namely, the spin degree of freedom of ground-state open-shell molecules is a new key for achieving magnetic-field-controlled molecular photofunctions.
Monoradicals possessing one unpaired electron are attracting increasing interest as a new class of luminescent materials.9–19 Their emission characteristics are unique to their doublet spin states, such as the absence of the heavy atom effect and high electron–photon conversion efficiency in organic light-emitting diodes.9–16 We have reported the magnetic-field-sensitive luminescence properties of (3,5-dichloro-4-pyridyl)bis(2,4,6-trichlorophenyl)methyl radicals (PyBTM) doped into host αH-PyBTM crystals (Fig. 1).18 The luminescence behaviors of 10 wt%-doped crystals, in which PyBTM molecules were aggregated, were modulated strongly by an external magnetic field. This was the first clear example of the magnetic-field-sensitive luminescence properties of organic radicals; thus, understanding the MFE mechanism would contribute hugely to exploring the magnetic-field-sensitive photofunctionalities of radicals. However, the mechanism has not been fully established, because the effects of the magnetic field on the emission properties have remained unclarified in magnetic fields over 3 T, where an efficient MFE was observed.
In this study, we determined the mechanism and key factors of the MFE for PyBTM-doped crystals. Previously, excited-state dynamics has been investigated by optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) and time-resolved emission spectroscopy combined with quantum mechanical simulations,19 in which the magnetic field accessed for the investigations was limited to the X-band region (ca. 326 mT). Here, the photophysical properties in magnetic fields from 0 to 14.5 T, covering the entire region where an appreciable MFE was observed, were firstly investigated by time-resolved luminescence measurements. These measurements enabled us to construct a complete picture of the luminescence dynamics, which had not been able to be accessed by previous studies. The magnetic field and temperature dependences of the emission spectra and decay profiles were measured for αH-PyBTM crystals doped with various concentrations of the PyBTM radical. Quantum simulations based on these measurements revealed that the magnetic-field-sensitive spin sublevel population of aggregated radicals in the ground states was the main factor governing the MFE.
I(t) = I0exp{−(t/τ)β} | (1) |
Similar emission decay behavior was also observed in Dope_4 (Fig. 2g–i) and Dope_22 (Fig. 2j–l), with lower and higher radical concentrations than Dope_10. In contrast, Dope_0.1, which exhibited only a monomer-centered emission, showed no changes in the luminescence intensity or lifetime (Fig. S4†). These results indicated that the MFE mechanism and species of aggregated PyBTM were the same in all the Dope_R crystals.
The thermal effect counteracted the MFE in the emission spectra of Dope_10.18Fig. 2f shows the temperature dependence of emission decay for the monomer emission of Dope_10 at 0 and 14.5 T. The differences in the amplitude and lifetime between these cases (i.e., the MFE) at 4.2 K reduced as the temperature increased and were negligible at 20 K. These results indicate that thermally activated processes are involved in the mechanism of the MFE with its activation energy below kBT with T = 20 K.
The emission lifetime measurements allowed us to construct a scheme for the MFE based on the following four results (Fig. 3a): the monomer emission amplitude increased with the magnetic field (Fig. 2d, i and l), the MFE was decreased by thermal energy (Fig. 2f), the monomer emission decay did not show a slow increase, and the photon counts had the largest values just after photoexcitation (Fig. 2b, h and k), and the monomer emission lifetime increased with the magnetic field (Fig. 2d, i and l).
The increase in the monomer emission amplitude with the magnetic field suggests that the spin sublevel population of a PyBTM dimer in the ground state is associated with the MFE (Fig. 3a, green dashed box).25 The spin states of the dimer radicals (i.e., the population between the S, T+, T0, and T− states) are modulated by the magnetic field (via Zeeman splitting) and heat (via the Boltzmann distribution). In the absence of a magnetic field, the population of the S state is the largest, whereas the population of the T− state increases with the magnetic field and becomes dominant because the exchange interactions (J) between the radicals in Dope_R are antiferromagnetic (Fig. 3b).19 This ground-state associated MFE is consistent with the decrease in the MFE with thermal energy; increasing the temperature at 14.5 T increases the population in the S state and decreases the population in the T− state, and thus counteracts the MFE. The highest photon count occurring just after photoexcitation suggests that the radical dimers are first excited to emissive states (Fig. 3a, magenta dashed box), because the photon count reflects the populations in the emissive excited states. Furthermore, the increase in the monomer emission lifetime with the magnetic field suggests the existence of two excited states with different lifetimes. Considering that the populations of triplet ground states are increased by increasing the magnetic field, the triplet excited states have longer lifetimes than the singlet excited states (Fig. 3a, blue dashed box).
Based on this discussion, we proposed the following MFE scheme for Dope_R (Fig. 3c). This scheme has two factors sensitive to the magnetic field: the distribution among the singlet (S) and triplet (T−, T0, and T+) ground states (ground-state MFE) and the ISC between singlet (S) and triplet (T0) RP states by the Δg mechanism (excited-state MFE). (R–R) is a PyBTM dimer in the ground state with singlet or triplet spin multiplicity. Irradiation with 370 nm light photoexcites radical R in (R–R) to form an RP state, (R*⋯R). The coupling between R* and R in (R*⋯R) is so weak that it can behave as monomer PyBTM and show luminescence with transition rate km1 (k = 1/τ in eqn (1)) and stretch factor β1.201(R⋯R)* can generate the singlet excimer state, 1(R–R)*, with rate constant kSex. We also assumed that a close RP,26–29 (R*⋯R), is formed, where field-sensitive ISC does not happen due to the energy gap between the S and the T0 states resulting from non-negligible exchange interactions (Fig. 3d). Although the 3(R–R) state shows a monomer emission in the excited state with transition rate km2 and stretch factor β2, the 1(R–R) state is assumed to form the excimer immediately after photoexcitation because of strong intramolecular interactions. As the population of the 3(R–R) state increased with the applied magnetic field, the populations in the emissive states responsible for monomer emission increased, which is consistent with the increase in monomer emission amplitudes with the magnetic field.
A quantum mechanical simulation was performed based on the scheme in Fig. 3c and d.30Fig. 4a and b show that the magnetic field dependences of the monomer emission intensities and decays were well reproduced by the simulation, although the excimer emission intensity changes were overestimated (Fig. S11†). This overestimation indicated that more aggregated species, which are negligibly sensitive to the magnetic field, contributed to the excimer emission.
Fig. 4 (a) Simulated and experimental monomer emission decays at 0, 7, and 14 T.31 (b) Simulated and experimental magnetic field dependences of monomer emission intensities. (c and d) Simulated monomer emission intensities without considering the MFE on (c) the ground states and (d) the excited states (for details of the simulations, see the ESI†). (e and f) Scheme of MFEs on (e) radicals (this system) and (f) conventional ground-state closed-shell molecules. |
The trends of temperature dependence of the emission decay (Fig. S8 and S9†) and a steady-state ODMR signal (Fig. S12†) were also reproduced. Fig. 4c and d show the simulated monomer emission intensities without considering the excited-state or ground-state MFE, and the shaded areas show the contribution of each MFE. Although the excited-state MFE slightly increased the emission intensity in the low-field region, the ground-state MFE greatly increased the intensity in the high-field region. These results suggest that the ground-state MFE is critical to magnetoluminescence in this system (Fig. 4e); this is distinct from conventional ground-state closed-shell systems, in which only excited state MFEs occur (Fig. 4f).
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental and simulation details and supplementary figures. See DOI: 10.1039/d0sc05965j |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |