Computational insights into the synergistic modulation of ΔEST, spin–orbit coupling, and reorganization energy in phthalimide-based TADF emitters
Abstract
Designing high-efficiency TADF emitters requires more than simply minimizing the singlet–triplet energy gap (ΔEST). It also demands careful control over spin–orbit coupling matrix elements (SOCME) and excited-state structural relaxation, which are often overlooked yet critically important. To uncover how these factors interplay, we have computationally investigated and engineered a series of phthalimide-based molecules by tuning three structural elements: the additional chromophore on the acceptor, incorporation of the phenyl spacer and the strength of the donor unit. Introduction of auxiliary chromophores and phenyl spacers (Group 1) enhances through-space charge transfer (TSCT), reducing ΔEST to <0.1 eV (0.004–0.074 eV) while maintaining moderate SOCME (0.20–0.50 cm−1). However, these molecules exhibit high reorganization energies (λ = 1.3–4.5 eV), which severely suppress reverse intersystem crossing (rISC). In contrast, replacing carbazole with stronger donors (Group 3) further strengthens TSCT (>80%), rigidifies the molecular framework, and dramatically lowers λ (0.01–0.73 eV), while preserving very small ΔEST (0.001–0.085 eV) and finite SOCME. Consequently, Group 3 molecules achieve markedly enhanced rISC rates, reaching 7.2 × 105 s−1. Among all candidates, compounds with acridine and phenoxazine donors exhibit the most favorable balance of ΔEST, SOC, TSCT, and λ, identifying them as the most promising TADF emitters. Overall, this study establishes reorganization energy as a decisive design parameter, alongside ΔEST and SOC, for the rational development of high-performance phthalimide-based TADF materials.

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