Han
Xia‡
a,
Yukun
Tang‡
b,
Youming
Zhang‡
a,
Fan
Ni
*c,
Yuntao
Qiu
a,
Chih-Wei
Huang
b,
Chung-Chih
Wu
*b and
Chuluo
Yang
*a
aGuangdong Research Center for Interfacial Engineering of Functional Materials, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518060, P. R. China. E-mail: clyang@szu.edu.cn
bDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Graduate Institute of Electronics Engineering and Graduate Institute of Photonics and Optoelectronics, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan. E-mail: wucc@ntu.edu.tw
cSchool of Instrument Science and Optoelectronics Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei 230009, P. R. China. E-mail: nfope@hfut.edu.cn
First published on 26th November 2021
The methyl group plays an important role in the regulation of the photoluminescence and electroluminescence properties of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) emitters. In this work, a new type of methyl effect was revealed by designing donor–accepter–donor (D–A–D) type TADF systems with decorating methyl groups at the ortho-position of the donor units. Different from previous work in which the methyl groups at the ortho-position resulted in improved TADF properties, the insertion of methyl groups in this work led to the reduction of the molecular rigidity, the photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) and the ratio of delayed fluorescence, as well as the extension of the lifetime of delayed fluorescence. The unusual changes of the photoluminescence behavior were well explained by theoretical simulations and further verified by the performance in electroluminescence devices. The blue organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) based on the new emitters achieved a maximum external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 19.3%.
Serving as the smallest alkyl group, the methyl group demonstrates a weak hyperconjugation effect and a steric hindrance effect when linked to an aromatic ring.4 The methyl group plays an important role in the design of TADF materials where three types of methyl effects can be concluded.5–10 Type 1: the introduction of methyl groups can effectively improve the luminescence performance of TADF materials. The Adachi5 and Monkman6 groups have revealed that methyl decorated molecules displayed more ideal TADF properties. Type 2: the introduction of methyl groups can switch on the TADF feature in some systems, clearly indicating the small group but the remarkable effect. Ding7 and Li8et al. have proved that methyl groups can be the key for the activation of the RISC channel. Type 3: methyl groups can even switch off the TADF behavior and turn on the room temperature phosphorescence (RTP). Bryce9 and Kim10 both have found that introducing methyl groups can be unfavorable for the RISC process such that the delayed fluorescence cannot be generated.
In type 1, the sole decoration of the methyl group at the ortho-position of the donor units in TADF materials usually meant the improvement of the molecular rigidity, PLQY and ratio of delayed fluorescence, and the shortening of the lifetime of delayed fluorescence. In this work, diphenyl sulfone (DPS) and 10H-spiro[acridine-9,8′-indolo[3,2,1-de]acridine] (SAIA) were used as the acceptor and donor units to design TADF molecules. The two methyl groups were linked on two phenyls at the ortho position of the donor SAIA to obtain multiple beneficial effects to achieve more efficient blue-shifted emission. To our surprise, different results were found in this work. The measured photophysical properties of the two emitters (DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA) revealed that the emission band of Me–DPS–SAIA with decorated methyl groups did demonstrate an obvious blue shift. However, the molecular rigidity, the rate constant of the RISC process, and the PLQY were all reduced, which are not quite the same as the previous results of the type 1 methyl effect. The theoretical simulation proved the enlarged energy gap (ΔEST) between the excited singlet–triplet (S1–T1) state, and the more flexible configuration in Me–DPS–SAIA, which are consistent with the photophysical properties of the prolonged lifetime of delayed fluorescence and a decreased PLQY. Moreover, the electroluminescence performance of the two emitters further confirmed the unexpected methyl effect.
The synthetic routes for the donor SAIA and the target compounds of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA are shown in Scheme 1 and Scheme S1 (ESI†). The donor SAIA was synthesized through the classical pathway for the construction of the spiroarcridine unit. DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were synthesized via a one-step Pd-catalyzed Buchwald–Hartwig C–N cross-coupling reaction. SAIA, DPS–SAIA, and Me–DPS–SAIA were characterized by 1H NMR spectroscopy, and high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) (see ESI,† Fig. S1–S7).
The molecular configurations and orbital distributions of the two molecules are shown in Fig. 1. It can be seen that both the two molecules exhibited distorted arrangements between the donor and acceptor units in the ground state. The dihedral angles between the diphenylsulfone and acridine units were both close to 90° for DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA (Fig. S8, ESI†). The twisted D–A link mode facilitated the efficient separation between the HOMOs and LUMOs, with the HOMOs mainly located on the acridine unit and the LUMOs mainly centered on the diphenylsulfone unit. The limited overlap (on the acridine unit) between the HOMO and LUMO in the two molecules implied the small ΔEST values and the possible activated reverse intersystem crossing.
Fig. 1 The optimized molecular conformations, frontier molecular orbital distributions and energy levels of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA. |
For the ground and excited energy levels, the simulated HOMO energy levels are identical (−5.25 eV) for the two molecules, which can be ascribed to the same donor unit and the similar HOMO distribution. Due to the weak electron-donating ability of methyl groups, the electron-withdrawing ability of diphenylsulfone in Me–DPS–SAIA is slightly weakened so that the LUMO energy level (−1.72 eV) of Me–DPS–SAIA is shallower than that (−1.84 eV) of DPS–SAIA. The natural transition orbital analysis demonstrated the charge transfer feature of the S1 states of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA (Fig. 2). It can be expected that the relatively weaker electron-withdrawing ability of Me–DPS may lead to the weaker charge transfer strength, matching well with the simulated results of a relatively lower S1 state energy level of 2.97 eV for DPS–SAIA but a higher energy level of 3.09 eV for Me–DPS–SAIA. The simulated T1 state energy levels of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were 2.95 and 2.97 eV, respectively. As a result, the twisted D–A–D arrangements in the two molecules enabled small ΔESTs of 0.02 eV for DPS–SAIA and 0.12 eV for Me–DPS–SAIA, which could efficiently facilitate the RISC process.
Then the comparison between the optimized ground state and excited state configurations of the two molecules was conducted (Fig. S8, ESI†). The geometries of the S1 and S0 states showed the deformation of the two emitters (Fig. S9, ESI†), and the root-mean-square-deviation (RMSD)12 values of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were 0.37 and 0.47 Å, respectively, indicating that the insertion of methyl groups introduced more flexibility in Me–DPS–SAIA. This result is contrary to our expectations. The further analysis revealed that the RMSD values between the donor SAIA at S0 and S1 states derived from DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were 0.08 Å and 0.11 Å, respectively, while the values between the acceptor DPS and Me–DPS at S0 and S1 states were 0.08 Å and 0.13 Å, respectively. The analysis of the dihedral angles between the sulfonyl group and the adjacent phenyl groups in the optimized ground state and excited state configurations revealed the enhanced structure rotation of the diphenylsulfone unit in Me–DPS–SAIA compared to that in DPS–SAIA (Fig. S10, ESI†). The inserted methyl groups with weak electron-donating ability affected the optimized configurations of the acceptor unit and further caused the increased flexibility of the whole molecule. The above results indicated that the inserted methyl groups resulted in more configuration changes of the donor and acceptor units after excitation.
The cyclic voltammetry curves of the two compounds in dichloromethane solutions were measured to evaluate the frontier molecular orbital energy levels. Determined by the onset of the oxidation curves, the HOMO energy levels of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were −5.17 eV and −5.16 eV, respectively, well matching with the same donor unit in the two molecules. The LUMO energy levels obtained from EHOMO and Eg were −2.20 eV for DPS–SAIA and −2.14 eV for Me–DPS–SAIA, consistent with the trend of the theoretical simulation.
To confirm the TADF mechanism, the steady and transient photoluminescence spectra of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA in aerated and degassed toluene were then measured. The steady emissions of the two emitters in toluene solutions were both enhanced after degassing (Fig. S12, ESI†). According to transient decay measurements, both the emitters exhibited microsecond-scale emission and nanosecond-scale emission in deoxygenated toluene (Fig. 4c and d). The long-lived components of the two emitters were totally quenched after being exposed to air, clearly revealing that the microsecond-scale emission was derived from the excited triplet states. Taking a comparison of the transient photoluminescence decay of the two emitters in toluene, we can find that the delay ratio (31%) of DPS–SAIA without decorating methyl groups was higher than that (20%) of Me–DPS–SAIA. The smaller ΔEST value enabled DPS–SAIA to exhibit a shorter long-lifetime but a higher ratio of delayed fluorescence to that of Me–DPS–SAIA, implying the more efficient RISC channel without decorating methyl groups.
To simulate the emissive behavior in OLEDs, the basic photophysical properties of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA in bis[2-(diphenylphosphino)phenyl]-ether oxide (DPEPO) doped films were measured. As shown in Fig. 5a, the 12 wt% DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA doped films emitted structureless blue light with the emission peaks centered at 460 and 449 nm, respectively. The broad emission bands with full widths at half maxima of 75 nm for DPS–SAIA and 78 nm for Me–DPS–SAIA revealed the typical charge transfer S1 states of the two emitters. The transient photoluminescence spectra of the two doped films were also measured (Fig. 5b and c), both demonstrating nanosecond-scale and microsecond-scale transitions. The double fluorescence components clearly identified the TADF mechanism. The delayed fluorescence ratio (33%) of DPS–SAIA was higher than that (13%) of Me–DPS–SAIA, further revealing the more efficient RISC channel of DPS–SAIA in the doped films. To visually prove the luminescence mechanism, the steady and transient photoluminescence spectra of the two doped films at different temperatures were measured (Fig. S14, ESI†). The temperature-sensitive long-lived emission strongly confirmed the thermally activated delayed fluorescence mechanism in the two emitters.
The PLQYs of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA doped DPEPO films were 66% and 60%, respectively. The relatively lower PLQY value of Me–DPS–SAIA doped DPEPO films matched well with the simulation results of the methyl-induced flexibility. To better evaluate the delayed fluorescence behavior, the rate constants of intersystem crossing (ISC), reverse intersystem crossing, singlet radiative and non-radiative transitions were calculated based on the basic photophysical data measured at room temperature. The larger ΔEST value resulted in the slower RISC process (1.1 × 105 s−1) in Me–DPS–SAIA to that (2.3 × 105 s−1) in DPS–SAIA. In addition, the radiation transition rate constants of the S1 state (kr,S) were 2.1 × 107 s−1 for DPS–SAIA and 1.0 × 107 s−1 for Me–DPS–SAIA. All the photophysical property data are listed in Tables 1 and 2.
Compound | λ abs (nm) | λ PL (nm) | E HOMO (eV) | E LUMO (eV) | E g (eV) | E S1 (eV) | E T1 (eV) | ΔESTc (eV) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Measured in toluene solutions (10−5 M) at 298 K. b The EHOMO values were calculated from cyclic voltammetry curves, and the Eg values (the optical energy gap) were obtained from the onset of the absorption spectra, ELUMO = EHOMO + Eg. c Estimated from the onset of the fluorescence (room temperature) and phosphorescence spectra (77 K) in toluene solutions (10−5 M). | ||||||||
DPS–SAIA | 355, 378 | 447 | −5.17 | −2.20 | 2.97 | 3.04 | 3.01 | 0.03 |
Me–DPS–SAIA | 356, 375 | 442 | −5.16 | −2.14 | 3.02 | 3.09 | 3.02 | 0.07 |
Compound | Φ PL (%) | Φ p (%) | Φ d (%) | τ p (ns) | τ d (μs) | k p (107 s−1) | k d (104 s−1) | k ISC (107 s−1) | k RISC (105 s−1) | k r,S (107 s−1) | k nr,S (106 s−1) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Total PLQY (ΦPL) of 12 wt% emitter-doped DPEPO film. b PLQYs of the prompt (Φp) and delayed (Φd) components. c Lifetimes of the prompt (τp) and delayed (τd) fluorescence. d The rate constants of ISC (kISC) and RISC (kRISC) processes. e The rate constants of singlet radiative (kr,S) and non-radiative (knr,S) transitions. | |||||||||||
DPS–SAIA | 66 | 44 | 22 | 20.8 | 6.6 | 4.8 | 15.2 | 1.6 | 2.3 | 2.1 | 11.0 |
Me–DPS–SAIA | 60 | 52 | 8 | 50.8 | 10.5 | 2.0 | 9.5 | 2.6 | 1.1 | 1.0 | 6.9 |
The introduction of methyl substitutions in Me–DPS–SAIA resulted in the blue-shifted photoluminescence and the same trend was found in the electroluminescence spectra (Fig. 6b, Table 3). The maximum emission peaks of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were 474 and 458 nm, respectively. The sole blue emission indicated the efficient energy transfer from the DPEPO host to the TADF guests. The DPS–SAIA-doped device revealed a relatively higher maximum EQE (19.3%) than that of the Me–DPS–SAIA-based device (17.1%). To explain the relatively high EQEs to the moderate PLQYs, the angle dependent p-polarized photoluminescence intensity measurements were then measured for DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA in the DPEPO host (12 wt%). The experimental Θ//s were both estimated to be 85% for the two doped films (Fig. S17, ESI†), which are much higher than that of the 67% of isotropic emitters. It is clear that the demonstrated high Θ//s could enable the effective optical out-coupling efficiency to guarantee the high electroluminescence performance. The EQEs of the two emitter-based devices can remain 16.2% for DPS–SAIA and 13.1% for Me–DPS–SAIA at 100 cd m−2. At 1000 cd m−2, the EQEs of DPS–SAIA and Me–DPS–SAIA were 8.6% and 5.7%, respectively. The EQE roll-off at 100 and 1000 cd m−2 were 16% and 55% for the DPS–SAIA-based device but 23% and 67% for the Me–DPS–SAIA-based device. It is obvious that DPS–SAIA with a higher ratio but a shorter lifetime of delayed fluorescence resulted in the relatively slower EQE roll-off. The EQE values over 5% further confirmed the TADF feature of the two emitters and well demonstrated the effective utilization of triplet excitons during the electroluminescence process. The maximum current efficiency (CE) and power efficiency (PE) values of the two devices were 30.4 cd A−1 and 18.1 Im W−1 for the DPS–SAIA-based device and 27.0 cd A−1 and 13.8 Im W−1 for the Me–DPS–SAIA-based device.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d1tc04939a |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this publication. |
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