Open Access Article
Ana C. Amorim
*a,
Jorge Morgado
b,
João P. Prates Ramalho
cd,
Hugo Cruz
ef,
Carla Cunha
a,
José A. Paixão
g,
J. Sérgio Seixas de Melo
a,
Susana M. M. Lopes
a,
Luís C. Branco
f and
Anthony J. Burke
*ahi
aUniversity of Coimbra, Coimbra Chemistry Center-Institute of Molecular Sciences (CQC-IMS) and Department of Chemistry, 3004-535, Coimbra, Portugal. E-mail: anacatarina.amorim@hotmail.com; ajburke@ff.uc.pt
bDepartment of Bioengineering and Instituto de Telecomunicações (IT), Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, 1049-001, Lisboa, Portugal
cDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, School of Sciences and Technology, University of Évora, Rua Romão Ramalho 59, 7000-671, Évora, Portugal
dHERCULES Laboratory, IN2PAST—Associate Laboratory for Research and Innovation in Heritage, Arts, Sustainability and Territory, University of Évora, 7000-809, Évora, Portugal
eINL–International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory, Avenida Mestre José Veiga, 4715-330, Braga, Portugal
fLAQV-REQUIMTE, Department of Chemistry, NOVA School of Science and Technology, NOVA University of Lisbon, 2819-516, Caparica, Portugal
gUniversity of Coimbra, CFisUC, Department of Physics, Coimbra, 3004-516, Portugal
hFaculty Pharmacy, University of Coimbra, Pólo das Ciências da Saúde, 3000-548, Coimbra, Portugal
iCenter for Neurosciences and Cellular Biology (CNC), Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Coimbra, 3004-504, Coimbra, Portugal
First published on 27th October 2025
Despite its promising electronic and semiconducting properties, 12H-phthaloperin-12-one remains a largely unexplored molecule, with limited studies regarding the impact of structural modifications on its properties and its application in light-emitting devices. To address this gap, we report the synthesis of 12 novel phthaloperinone derivatives, designed to fine-tune the photophysical, electrochemical, thermal and electroluminescence properties through the incorporation of electron-donating and electron-withdrawing substituents. The majority of substituents was found to interfere with the electronic distribution in the phthaloperinone core during the electronic excitation process. The introduction of a triphenylamine unit, as in compounds 3f/4f, resulted in the lowest energy gap of 2.22 eV, making this isomeric mixture a promising candidate for use as an organic semiconductor material. Electrochemical studies demonstrated that compounds 3e/4e–3h/4h and 3l/4l exhibited enhanced electrochemical stability, while thermal analysis showed that the pyrene-substituted derivative (3e/4e) displayed the highest thermal resistance (Td = 458 °C). Organic light-emitting diodes were fabricated to evaluate their electroluminescence properties. Compounds 3l/4l, which contain a phenyltriazolyl unit, achieved the best performance, displaying a maximum luminance of 99 cd m−2 at 7.5 V, a luminous efficiency of 0.014 cd A−1, and a turn-on voltage of 3.3 V. These findings provide valuable insights into the structure–property relationships of phthaloperinone derivatives and highlight their potential for a wide range of applications, including electronic and optoelectronic devices.
Building on the success of these rylene diimides in organic electronics, perinone-based chromophores have recently emerged as attractive alternatives. Originally developed as robust industrial pigments,12,13 their extended π-conjugation and structural similarity to PDI and NDI derivatives have highlighted their potential in organic electronics, particularly as n-type semiconductors in photovoltaic devices.14–17 This increasing attention is supported by their synthetic simplicity (their methods are generally modular in nature and allow the introduction of diverse functionalities), strong visible light absorption, high fluorescence quantum yields (φF) (up to 51%), and exceptional photochemical and thermal stability.18–20
Despite these promising characteristics, reports exploring perinone derivatives in OLEDs devices are extremely scarce. Within this class of chromophores, 12H-phthaloperin-12-one, also known as phthaloperinone or Solvent Orange 60, is the only example reported as a promising material for organic electroluminescent devices, mentioned in a patent from the 1990s, which, unfortunately, does not include any detailed device performance data.21 This lack of studies strongly contrasts with the extensive research on PDI- and NDI-based materials, highlighting the absence of similar investigations on perinone-type systems and the need to explore their potential in light-emitting applications.
While its use in OLEDs remains unexplored, the intrinsic photophysical and electrochemical properties of phthaloperinone have been studied, revealing intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) behaviour and an estimated HOMO–LUMO gap below 3 eV, suggesting potential semiconducting behaviour.18–20 In addition to these intrinsic properties, this compound has also demonstrated potential in other areas. For instance, it has been investigated as a fluorescence probe with a “switch-off” behaviour in response to Cu2+ ions, highlighting its potential for the development of sensing materials.22 Moreover, a recent study by Palmer et al. explored access to the triplet state of this structure without using a transition metal, by simply replacing the C
O group with a C
S moiety. This modification enables its use as a metal-free triplet photosensitizer, with potential applications in photodynamic therapy, photocatalysis and solar energy conversion.23
This limited research on phthaloperinones presents a unique opportunity to explore this understudied class of compounds in light-emitting devices. Furthermore, the possibility of fine-tuning their properties through strategic molecular design by introducing electron-donating and electron-withdrawing substituents remains largely unexplored. Such structural modifications are key tools for adjusting energy levels, improving charge transport, and optimizing optoelectronic performance, thereby broadening the potential of these materials across organic electronic devices, including organic field-effect transistors (OFETs), organic photovoltaics (OPVs), and OLEDs.24,25
To address this opportunity, and taking into consideration the promising electrochemical and photophysical properties of these compounds reported in previous literature, the present study reports the synthesis of novel phthaloperinone derivatives, along with the unsubstituted phthaloperinone, aiming to explore how different substituent groups influence their properties. The effects of substitution on their photophysical, electrochemical, and thermal properties were systematically evaluated. Additionally, theoretical calculations were also performed to help correlating molecular structure and properties. Finally, these newly synthesized structures were used to fabricate simple OLED devices in order to assess their electroluminescence properties.
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Fig. 1 Overall synthetic pathway leading to the target phthaloperinones (3a/4a–3l/4l) with corresponding yields and isomeric ratio (3 : 4). | ||
However, in a few cases, after several preparative TLC plates, a few milligrams of the regioisomers 3b, 4b, 3g, and 4g were successfully separated, as shown in Fig. 2. With these small quantities, it was possible to perform 1D and 2D NMR experiments to confirm the structure of each isomer and conduct photophysical and electrochemical studies, enabling the study of their isolated properties. The heteronuclear multiple bond correlation (HMBC) spectra (Fig. S22, S25 and S47, SI) indicated that compounds 3b and 3g correspond to regioisomers with the substituent at the 9-position, while 4b and 4g bear the substituent at the 10-position. Based on this, we assume that in all other isomeric mixtures, the 3-series isomers correspond to phthaloperinones with substituents at the 9-position, while the 4-series isomers correspond to phthaloperinones with substituents at the 10-position.
Different substituent groups, including electron-withdrawing (3c/4c and 3l/4l) and electron-donating (3a/4a, 3b/4b and 3d/4d–3k/4k) groups, were introduced to assess their impact on the ICT, as well as on their photophysical, electrochemical, thermal and electroluminescence properties. The introduction of these substituents involved a rich variety of chemical reactions including nucleophilic substitution and click reactions, as well as Suzuki–Miyaura, Buchwald–Hartwig and Sonogashira cross-coupling reactions.
The analysis of the substitution patterns in the 3- and 4-series of regioisomers reveals a general trend: compounds bearing strong electron-donating groups (3g/4g, 3h/4h, 3i/4i, 3j/4j and 3k/4k) with the exception of compounds 3f/4f tend to produce slightly higher proportions of the 4-isomer, whereas those containing electron-withdrawing substituents (3c/4c and 3l/4l), as well as weakly donating groups, including compounds 3a/4a, 3b/4b and 3d/4d yielded approximately equimolar mixtures of both isomers. These observations suggest that electronic factors play a major role, as strong electron-donating groups enhance charge delocalization, slightly stabilizing one regioisomer over the other. Bulkier aromatic groups such as pyrene (3e/4e) and triphenylamine (3f/4f) tended to favour the formation of the isomer 3 likely due to steric hindrance affecting the approach of the reacting species.
In general, the final compounds (3a/4a–3l/4l) were obtained in very good yields (up to >99% yield) using simple purification methods, typically involving n-hexane washes or short chromatographic columns. All the compounds exhibit colouration ranging from orange to reddish, as depicted in Fig. S80 (SI). All experimental procedures and characterization data related to the synthesis are provided in the SI.
Compound 3b crystallizes in the centric monoclinic space group P21/c (nb. 14) with cell parameters a = 14.882(2) Å, b = 6.2974(9) Å, c = 21.093(3) Å, β = 101.747(8)°, and one symmetry-independent molecule (Z = 4, Z′ = 1) per unit cell. An ORTEP of the molecule is shown in Fig. 3, that fully confirms the expected molecular configuration based on the NMR studies. Bond distances and angles of the molecule are unexceptional. The most relevant ones are provided in Table S2 (SI). It is noteworthy to point out the short C7–N2 bond correlating with a significant double-bond character. All rings in the structure are planar with maximum deviation from the least-squares plane of 0.06 Å, and rms deviation of 0.03 Å for the core moiety and 0.08 Å (max), 0.006 Å (rms) for the naphthalene substituent, respectively. The angle between the least-squares planes of the molecule core and that of the naphthalene substituent is 70.63(3)° (Fig. S81 and Table S2, SI). The crystal structure does not feature classical hydrogen bonds, but a weak intramolecular C12–H12⋯O1 interaction can be spotted with a C12⋯O1 distance of 2.969(2) Å and C12–H12⋯O1 angle of 122°. A view of the molecular packing is shown in Fig. 4. The CIF containing the crystallographic data for compound 3b was deposited at the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre, with reference CCDC 2423273.
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| Fig. 3 ORTEP drawing depicting the molecule of 3b. The anisotropic displacement ellipsoids are drawn at the 50% probability level. | ||
The Frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs) of the compounds are illustrated in Fig. S83 (SI). For most of the compounds, the HOMO resembles that of the model compound, being primarily localized on the perimidine moiety, whereas the LUMO is mainly distributed over the isoindolinone moiety.
Fig. 5 illustrates the change in the electron density that occurs in the Model compound and pure isomers of the synthesised compounds when they are electronically excited (lowest energy excitation). Fig. S82 (SI) shows the corresponding changes for all the compounds. The difference between the electronic densities of the states involved in the transitions, Δρ(r), is depicted, clearly revealing the regions of the compounds that lose or gain electron density upon that electronic excitation. The major electronic rearrangement is restricted to the phthaloperinone core for all the compounds, resembling the rearrangement that occurs in the Model compound, with particular features depending on the nature of the attached substituent group. The electronic relocation in the Model compound (Fig. 5) reveals a clear charge transfer from the perimidine moiety to the isoindolinone moiety, which is consistently observed across all compounds. This charge density redistribution evidences the ICT character of the electronic excitation.
The compounds with phenyl (3a/4a), naphthalene (3b/4b) and pyrene (3e/4e) aromatic units attached at the 9- and 10-positions of phthaloperinone do not present any visible change of charge density at the aromatic substituents indicating a limited participation of these aromatic units on the electronic excitation process, and therefore a limited participation in the FMOs involved in the lowest energy excitation. This result was expected specially for compound 3b, since the dihedral angle of 70.63° between the core and the naphthyl substituent, as verified in the X-ray crystallography, probably contributes to the limited electronic interaction between them, thereby hindering the involvement of the aromatic substituent in the electronic excitation process. An interesting case is represented by compounds 3e/4e, for which the S1 state shows a more complex configuration. Although the HOMO and HOMO−1 extend over the pyrene moiety, similar contributions are found in the LUMO+1, which participates in the excitation. Consequently, the resulting electron density difference is closely comparable to that of the model compound.
For compounds 3d/4d, bearing the phenylacetylene electron withdrawing group, an increase in electronic charge is visible in this unit upon excitation (Fig. S82, SI), which is expected on geometrical grounds due to its linear conjugated system. For the compounds bearing strong electron-donating groups (3f/4f (triphenylamine), 3g/4g (phenylamine), 3h/4h (diphenylamine), 3i/4i (carbazole), 3j/4j (piperidine), and 3k/4k (dibutylamine)) the HOMO extends over the attached substituents (Fig. S83, SI), and a reduction in electron density on these groups is expected upon excitation. That is clearly visible in compounds 3g/4g, 3i/4i, 3j/4j, 4h, strongly evident on 3h, and only slightly noticeable in 3k (due to the aliphatic nature of this group and lack of a π-system, which is the anti-thesis to 3h that has a very extended π-system (diphenylamine)). The same electron donor effect of the triphenylamine is observed for 3f, but when this group is at the 10-position, in 4f, a slight electron acceptor character is inferred from the DFT calculations, as there is a small increase of the electron density in the group when the compound is excited. For the compounds bearing electron-withdrawing substituents (difluorophenyl in 3c/4c and phenyltriazolyl in 3l/4l) the LUMO extends toward the pendant groups (Fig. S83, SI), resulting in increased electron density on these substituents upon excitation, particularly in 4c and 4l (Fig. S82, SI).
The ICT characterization index (Δr index) (Table S3, SI) was used to quantify the charge transfer distance and classify the nature of these electronic transitions.27 A high Δr index indicates a strong ICT character, with transitions typically classified as ICT when exceeding the widely accepted threshold of 2.0 Å. Based on this criterion, most S1 excitations, including that of the Model compound, can be identified as ICT. The exceptions are compounds 3h/4h, 3i and 3j/4j. For these compounds, all with strong electron-donor groups, there is an important electronic flux from both extremes of the molecule toward the centre thus resulting in a smaller Δr value. For the rest of the compounds, with electron-withdrawing groups, the electron displacement is unidirectional resulting in a higher Δr value. In particular, for the compounds 3c/4c, 3d/4d, 3f/4f and 3l/4l the index value is much larger, thus indicating a larger displacement distance of the charge upon excitation.
The oscillator strength and the absorption wavelengths of key transitions for the compounds in dichloromethane were calculated (Table S3, SI). The simulated absorption spectra for the successfully isolated regioisomers 3b, 4b, 3g, and 4g, along with their comparison to the experimental spectra, are presented in the photophysical properties section. Additionally, for these isomers, the geometric optimization of the first excited electronic state (S1) and vertical emission calculations were performed.
The calculated HOMO–LUMO gaps (Fig. 6) are similar to that of the Model compound and remain largely unaffected by the substituents. In most cases, the HOMO energy is only slightly influenced by substitution. Notable destabilization is observed in compounds 3f/4f and 3j/4j, and to a lesser extent in 3g/4g and 3k/4k, all of which bear strong electron-donating groups. In these compounds, the HOMO extends over the attached substituents (Fig. S83, SI), with the increased electron density on these donor groups leading to the observed HOMO destabilization, consistent with the general effect of electron-donating substituents on Frontier orbital energies. For the 3j/4j compounds, the LUMO levels energy increase as observed for the corresponding HOMO energies, maintaining an unchanged energy gap. However, in the case of 3f/4f, the LUMO levels remain unaffected relative to the Model compound, while the HOMO energies increase, leading to a significant energy gap (Egap) reduction. This reduction makes 3f/4f promising candidates for use as organic semiconductor materials. In general, all compounds exhibit Egap below 3 eV, which suggests favourable optoelectronic properties. However, the results of these calculations performed at the single molecule are likely to differ of the properties in solid-state, due to the interactions between the molecules, influenced by their packing.
Solvent polarity, in general, had a slight effect on the spectral properties. Increasing the solvent polarity (in the order: toluene, DCM and DMF), led to either red and blue shifts of the maximum absorption spectra (λabsmax) depending on the substituent. The maximum emission peaks (λemmax) consistently red-shifted (∼2–16 nm) with increasing solvent polarity for all compounds (Tables S4 and S5 and Fig. S84 and S85, SI). As shown in Fig. 7(b), when weak electron-donor groups are attached to the phthaloperinone (such as in compounds 3a/4a, 3b/4b and 3e/4e), the shape and position of the absorption peaks are relatively similar to those of the Model compound. The introduction of phenyl (3a/4a), naphthalene (3b/4b) and pyrene (3e/4e) as phthaloperinone substituents caused minimal spectral shifts, indicating that these aromatic substituents remain electronically decoupled from the core. This is presumably mainly due to the deviation from coplanarity as evidenced in 3b, and gratifyingly, this observation aligns with the DFT findings. The introduction of a phenylacetylene group (3d/4d) caused a slight redshift of both absorption and emission spectra (Fig. 7(b)) as expected from the previous discussion on the DFT calculations. This result is consistent with the DFT-calculated HOMO–LUMO gap, which is lower for compounds 3d/4d (2.81/2.82 eV) when compared to the other weak donor-substituted compounds (3a/4a, 3b/4b and 3e/4e). In this compound, the LUMO extends over the phenylacetylene substituent (Fig. S83, SI), leading to a decrease in LUMO energy. This delocalization enhances the electronic coupling between the phenylacetylene group and the phthaloperinone core, resulting in reduced HOMO–LUMO gap and suggesting partial charge-transfer character in the electronic excitation. For moderate to strong electron-donor groups (Fig. 7(c)), the presence of nitrogen atoms in the substituents leads to slight changes in the overall spectroscopic properties. These changes are more evident for compounds 3f/4f and 3k/4k. The introduction of triphenylamine (3f/4f) and phenylamine (3g/4g) units caused notable blue shifts in the absorption spectra leading to an increase of Stokes shift (Δss) of approximately 1000 to 2000 cm−1 (depending on the solvent), relative to the other derivatives. Again, the DFT results corroborate this experimental data. For phthaloperinones with electron-withdrawing groups (as difluorophenyl in 3c/4c and phenyltriazolyl in 3l/4l), in Fig. 7(d), the shapes of absorption and emission spectra are very similar, but both λabsmax and λemmax showed a red-shift when compared to the Model compound.
The spectra of isolated compounds 3b, 4b, 3g and 4g in DCM (Fig. 8(a) and (b), respectively) show that for weak electron-donor groups (in the case of 3b and 4b, with a naphthalene unit at the 9- and 10-positions, respectively), both absorption and emission spectra are nearly identical. However, when a strong electron donor group is present (as in 3g and 4g) both spectra differ considerably. While compound 3g maintains the same profile of λabsmax and λemmax near to the maxima of the Model compound, compound 4g shows completely different shapes and blue shifted λabsmax and λemmax. These differences are more evident in the absorption spectra. This behavior can be rationalized by the fact that, in compounds 3b/4b, the Frontier orbitals do not extend over the attached group (Fig. S83, SI). Consequently, the electronic system involved in the excitation is confined to the core moiety, which is identical in both isomers. In contrast, the situation is different for the 3g/4g pair. Compared to compound 3g, in compound 4g the Frontier orbitals, particularly the HOMO, extend substantially over the phenylamine group. In the same figure (Fig. 8), the simulated absorption spectra and vertical emission calculations for the isolated regioisomers 3b, 4b, 3g, and 4g are also shown, exhibiting trends consistent with the experimental data, despite significant deviations in the predicted absorption and emission maxima.
In solid-state (powder) measurements, all compounds showed a red-shifted λabsmax (6–69 nm) when compared with the Model compound, with the exception of compounds 3f/4f (see detail data in Table S6 and Fig. S86, SI). On the other hand, all compounds showed a blue-shift in the λemmax, except the isolated isomer 4g. Compounds 3c/4c and 3i/4i had the largest shifts in λemmax and λabsmax, respectively, resulting in Δss two times higher than the Model compound. Some differences were observed in λemmax between the isolated isomers 3b and 4b, and 3g and 4g, though in solid-state, these isolated isomers displayed more similar behaviour. Compounds 3k/4k were not tested due to its oil-like consistency.
In general, solution fluorescence quantum yields (ϕF) ranged between 2 and 8%, decreasing as solvent polarity increases for all compounds (Table S5, SI). The solid-state (powder) fluorescence quantum yields were generally lower than those in solution, with compounds 3f/4f, 3i/4i and 3l/4l presenting the lowest ϕF values (∼10−3), in contrast with the other compounds (∼10−2) (Table S6, SI). In both solution and solid-state studies, the fluorescence lifetimes (τi) are found mono-exponential for all compounds and range from 320 to 1300 ps (see Tables S5 and S6, SI). In solution, the kNR/kR ratio varies from 12 to 58, whereas in solid-state this ratio was between 30 and 199 times (Fig. S88, SI), indicating that nonradiative decay processes dominate over the radiative processes in both conditions.
Additionally, all isomeric mixtures, except 3k/4k due to its oil-like texture, were deposited by vacuum deposition on glass substrates and Spectrosil, allowing the measurement of the absorbance in films (Fig. S89 and S90, SI). As shown in Table S7 (SI), for all compounds, the λabsmax of the films were red-shifted when compared to the λabsmax in solution (DCM) and blue-shifted when compared to the λabsmax in powder. We attribute this behaviour to the different intermolecular interactions, such as van der Waals, hydrogen bonding, and possibly π–π interactions. The variation in the absorption spectra of thin films of phthaloperinone derivatives upon aging was also studied (Fig. S90, SI), indicating that compounds 3b/4b, 3f/4f and 3l/3l are by far the most stable compounds in film form, even when exposed to air.
| Compounds | Tda/Tmb (°C) | HOMO (eV)c | LUMO (eV)c | Energy gap (eV)d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a Temperature of 5% weight loss.b Melting temperature.c HOMO/LUMO calculated from the first oxidation and first reduction onset potentials, respectively.d |HOMO–LUMO|.e No events were observed.f Not determined. | ||||
| Model | 285.1/225.5 | −5.58 | −3.15 | 2.43 |
| 3a/4a | 330.6/207.6 | −5.57 | −3.19 | 2.38 |
| 3b/4b | 354.7/179.1 | −5.61 | −3.23 | 2.38 |
| 3c/4c | 365.5/221.2 | −5.58 | −3.18 | 2.40 |
| 3d/4d | 372.4/217.7 | −5.63 | −3.23 | 2.40 |
| 3e/4e | 458.0/292.9 | −5.64 | −3.23 | 2.41 |
| 3f/4f | 260.3/—e | −5.30 | −3.08 | 2.22 |
| 3g/4g | 386.1/261.2 | −5.46 | −3.07 | 2.39 |
| 3h/4h | 309.7/220.9 | −5.51 | −3.10 | 2.41 |
| 3i/4i | 200.0/—e | −5.65 | −3.35 | 2.30 |
| 3j/4j | 243.1/167.6 | −5.46 | −3.06 | 2.40 |
| 3k/4k | 257.2/—f | −5.42 | −3.18 | 2.24 |
| 3l/4l | 285.9/212.5 | −5.63 | −3.30 | 2.33 |
| 3b | nd | −5.61 | −3.18 | 2.43 |
| 4b | nd | −5.59 | −3.20 | 2.39 |
| 3g | nd | −5.44 | −3.08 | 2.36 |
| 4g | nd | −5.44 | −3.02 | 2.42 |
In general, all compounds exhibit reversible reduction behaviour in the negative potential range. However, only compounds 3e/4e, 3f/4f, 3g/4g, 3h/4h and 3l/4l show reversible oxidation behaviour in the positive potential range, indicating that pyrene, triphenylamine, phenylamine, diphenylamine and phenyltriazolyl substituents, respectively, enhance electrochemical stability.
Multi-scan CV was performed for some of the compounds (Fig. S93, SI), demonstrating that compounds 3a/4a, 3e/4e and 3h/4h exhibit some electrochemical stability in the positive potential range, although a slight appearance of new species is observed. In contrast, for compounds 3b/4b, 3d/4d, 3j/4j and 3l/4l the main anodic peaks completely disappear with an increasing number of scans, indicating that they are not electrochemically stable. The appearance of new species between 0.25 and 1 V is common in most of our compounds. We believe that these new species are dimers formed during the electrooxidation reaction.29
The HOMO and LUMO energy levels, as well as the energy gaps, are very similar for all the compounds, even when compared with the unsubstituted phthaloperinone (Model compound) (Table 1). However, and in agreement with the results obtained from theoretical calculations, compounds 3f/4f showed an increased HOMO level compared to the other compounds, and the lowest energy gap (2.22 eV). In fact, the low energy gaps demonstrated by all compounds highlight their potential semiconductive properties.
It is also worth noting that, although the substituents have small contributions to the electronic transitions or charge distributions, which is a clear indication that both the HOMOs and the LUMOs are primarily localized in the core of phthaloperinones (as also verified by DFT studies), they have some influence on the electrochemical stability of the structure.
As shown in Table 1 and Fig. S94 (SI), compounds 3a/4a–3e/4e, 3g/4g and 3h/4h have the highest thermal decomposition temperatures ranging from 309.7 to 458.0 °C. According to TGA analysis, the introduction of these substituents enhances thermal stability when compared with the Model compound (unsubstituted phthaloperinone) (Td = 285.1 °C). As expected, the large, rigid and planar conjugated structure of pyrene substituent provides the highest thermal stability (Td = 458 °C).30 Additionally, it was also observed that the introduction of fluorine atoms (3c/4c) increases the thermal stability, comparing to compounds 3a/4a, as C–F bond is one of the strongest bonds and, the inductive effect of fluorine atoms can reduce the likelihood of decomposition.31 The introduction of an acetylene unit (–C
C–) (3d/4d) also contributes to the increased thermal stability, probably due to extended conjugation and improved molecular packing.
On the other hand, compounds 3f/4f, 3i/4i–3k/4k exhibited lower thermal stability compared to the Model compound, possibly due to the non-planar nature of their substituents (as in compounds 3f/4f and 3i/4i), which disrupts π-stacking and weakens intermolecular interactions, and the presence of alkyl chains (as in compounds 3j/4j and 3k/4k), which increases molecular flexibility, reducing rigidity and packing efficiency. The decomposition temperature of compounds 3l/4l is very similar to that of the Model compound. Although the triazole moiety in 3l/4l is electron-rich and thermally stable, it does not provide significant additional thermal stabilization to the core structure.
As depicted in Table 1 and Fig. S95 (SI), DSC analysis shows that the melting temperatures do not differ significantly, except for compounds 3b/4b, 3e/4e, 3g/4g and 3j/4j. No events were observed for compounds 3f/4f and 3i/4i in the temperature range used in these studies.
In general, the light-onset voltage (here defined as the voltage at which a minimum luminance of 10−2 cd m−2 is detected) varies significantly between compounds, ranging from 3.3 V (3l/4l) to 8.0 V (3i/4i) (Table S9 and Fig. S96, SI). Compounds 3c/4c, 3d/4d, 3f/4f and 3h/4h exhibited the poorest device performance, not even reaching a maximum luminance of 10 cd m−2 with very low current efficiency (<0.0015 cd A−1). OLEDs based on compounds 3a/4a, 3b/4b, 3e/4e, 3g/4g, 3i/4i, and 3j/4j exhibited decent performances, with moderate maximum luminance (ranging from 11 to 41 cd m−2) and low current efficiencies. Surprisingly, OLEDs based on compounds 3l/4l achieved a maximum luminance of 99 cd m−2 at 7.5 V with a current efficiency of 0.014 cd A−1. These compounds are also the ones that exhibit the lowest turn-on voltage (3.3 V). Therefore, OLEDs based on 3l/4l show the best overall performance (Fig. 10(a)).
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| Fig. 10 (a) Current and luminance versus driving voltage of compounds 3l/4l. (b) Electroluminescence efficiency and external quantum yield versus driving voltage of compounds 3l/4l. | ||
External quantum efficiencies (EQE) values vary in a very similar way to luminous efficiencies (Table S9 and Fig. S97, SI). Therefore, the highest EQE (0.017%) was also achieved with the OLEDs based on compounds 3l/4l (Fig. 10(b)), which, surprisingly, are the compounds with the lowest solid and solution fluorescence quantum yield (Tables S5 and S6, SI). On the other hand, compounds with the higher solution fluorescence quantum yields (such as 3f/4f, 3g/4g, 3h/4h and 3j/4j) or powder fluorescence quantum yields (such as 3d/4d) presented lower EQEs. As the radiative decay efficiency is expected to be the same under photoexcitation and under electrical excitation, the absence of proportionality between photoluminescence efficiency and electroluminescence efficiency is attributed to the different yields of excited state formation in the OLEDs, which is mainly determined by the charge (electrons and holes) mobility of the various compounds, as the charge injection barriers, in view of the similarity of the HOMO and LUMO energies, are expected not to vary much.
The performance of these simple OLEDs is comparable to previously reported devices based on PDI and NDI chromophores,8–11 which is encouraging considering the simple device architecture employed. These results highlight the potential of phthaloperinone derivatives as efficient emitters and suggest that further optimization of the OLED architecture could lead to improved performance.
All phthaloperinone based OLEDs emit in the orange-red spectral region (Fig. 9(b)). The electroluminescence spectra (EL) are very similar for all compounds and are also similar to the photoluminescence spectra in solid-state (powder) (Table S10, SI). Similarly to the photoluminescence spectra in powder, EL spectra showed a red-shift when compared to the photoluminescence spectra in solution (Table S10, SI).
The shelf lifetime of OLEDs (structure shown in Fig. 9(a)) based on compounds 3c/4c, 3e/4e–3j/4j and 3l/4l (Fig. S99, SI) was investigated. The aging studies were performed with the unfinished structure (without the top Ca/Al cathodes) in air/dark conditions or inside the glove box and characterised after the Ca/Al deposition. We found that the OLEDs incorporating compounds 3e/4e, 3f/4f, 3h/4h and 3l/4l did not exhibit significant changes in performance after aging for 5–17 days either in air/dark conditions or inside the glove box. Furthermore, the EL spectra of compounds 3e/4e, 3f/4f and 3l/4l remained unchanged. On the other hand, OLEDs based on compounds 3g/4g showed significant performance degradation after 17 days of aging, both in air/dark conditions and inside the glove box. The remaining OLEDs (those incorporating compounds 3c/4c, 3i/4i and 3j/4j) exhibited substantial and, in some cases, even complete loss of performance after nearly 100 days of aging under both conditions. Interestingly, the EL spectrum of the OLED containing compound 3i/4i retained its spectral profile despite the performance loss. Only a few OLEDs produced detectable EL spectra, as the emission from most aged devices was too weak to allow their EL spectra to be recorded. Overall, OLEDs based on 3e/4e, 3f/4f and 3l/4l appear to be the most stable.
Despite this limitation, qualitative differences can still be observed among the devices. Differences in current levels and curve shapes suggest variations in charge transport efficiency, possibly influenced by the phthaloperinone derivatives’ properties. For instance, the device based on compounds 3e/4e showed higher current values when compared to compounds 3a/4a, 3b/4b and 3d/4d in the negative voltage region indicating relatively better conduction behavior (Fig. S100(a), SI). While on the positive range, 3a/4a exhibits the best result. Devices based on compounds 3f/4f, and 3h/4h exhibit increased current when compared to 3g/4g, 3i/4i and 3j/4j, suggesting that these compounds may facilitate hole transport (Fig. S100(b), SI). Furthermore, when comparing compounds 3c/4c and 3l/4l it is possible to see that both devices display similar trends in the positive voltage range, with the exception of 3c/4c which achieves higher currents in the negative voltage range (Fig. S100(c), SI).
Despite the limitations due to the thin active layer, which did not allow the determination of the hole mobility, these preliminary results provide insights into the relative charge transport properties of different compounds. For future studies, thicker active layers are needed to obtain reliable hole transport mobility values.
A variety of substituents groups, with electron-donating and electron-withdrawing characteristics, were introduced to the phthaloperinone scaffold, and their impact was evaluated. DFT calculations revealed that compounds 3c/4c, 3d/4d and 3f/4f–3l/4l caused interference in the eletronic charge distribution during the eletronic excitation process, while compounds with phenyl (3a/4a), naphthalene (3b/4b) and pyrene (3e/4e) aromatic units exhibited limited interaction with the phthaloperinone core. Additionally, based on predicted HOMO and LUMO energy levels, compounds 3f/4f, which contain a triphenylamine group, emerged as the most promising organic semiconductive material. These theoretical predictions were supported by experimental photophysical and electrochemical studies. Overall, all synthesized derivatives demonstrated promising semiconductive properties, with compounds 3f/4f exhibiting the lowest energy gap (2.22 eV).
Furthermore, electrochemical studies indicated that compounds 3e/4e–3h/4h (bearing moderate and strong eletron donor substituents) and 3l/4l (bearing phenyltriazolyl electron-withdrawing group) were shown to be the most stable, revealing reversibility in both negative and positive potential ranges. Thermal analysis revealed that compounds 3a/4a–3e/4e, 3g/4g and 3h/4h showed increased thermal decomposition temperatures, i.e. increased thermal stability, when compared to that of the Model compound, with the pyrene-containing derivative (3e/4e) exhibiting the highest thermal stability (Td = 458 °C).
In OLED devices, compounds 3e/4e, 3g/4g, 3i/4i and 3j/4j exhibited decent performances. However, compounds 3l/4l, with a phenyltriazolyl unit, presented the best overall performance, achieving a maximum luminance of 99 cd m−2 at 7.5 V with a current efficiency of 0.014 cd A−1. These compounds also exhibited the lowest turn-on voltage (3.3 V) and an EQE of 0.017%. These values, achieved using a simple device architecture, are comparable to those reported for PDI- and NDI-based systems, suggesting that further optimization of the device structure should yield even higher efficiencies.
CCDC 2423273 (3b) contains the supplementary crystallographic data for this paper.32
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