Reverse intersystem crossing from high-level triplet excited electronic states of fluorescent organic molecules†
Abstract
Reverse intersystem crossing (RISC) from an excited electronic triplet state, Tm, to an excited electronic singlet state, Sn, of fluorescent organic molecules used as light emitters for organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs) offers the prospect of harvesting all electrically generated singlet and triplet excitons, enabling OLEDs with high external quantum efficiency. The latest generation of high-efficiency light-emitting organic compounds for OLEDs is designed to utilize thermally-activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) which arises as a result of RISC from the lowest-energy triplet excited state, T1, to the fluorescent singlet excited state, S1. RISC from upper-level (“hot”) triplet excited states (“hRISC”) in fluorescent organic molecules offers an important route to overcoming lingering technical limitations associated with the relatively long lifetime of the T1 state in most TADF emitters but has been much less commonly reported. In this work we report the synthesis and characterization of two exemplars, DPOTAB and DPOTABCN, of a new class of fluorescent organic molecules designed specifically for hRISC. The energy difference between the T4 and S1 states for these two molecules is calculated to be very small, whereas the calculated energy gap between their T4 and T3 states and between their S1 and T3 states is large. These features coupled with their high photoluminescence (PL) quantum efficiency in solution satisfy key criteria required for prospective emitters in fluorescence-based OLEDs utilizing hRISC. Strong evidence for hRISC from T4 to S1 in DPOTAB is provided by steady-state and time-resolved PL emission measured at temperatures from 77 K to room temperature, including emission arising from energy transfer from ketone triplet sensitizers. This is one of the first examples of hRISC from a triplet excited state higher than the T3 level in a fluorescent organic molecule.