Published April 30, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Highly emissive excitons with reduced exchange energy in thermally activated delayed fluorescent molecules

  • 1. Laboratory for Chemistry of Novel Materials, University of Mons, Place du Parc 20, B-7000 Mons, Belgium.
  • 2. Organic Semiconductor Centre, EaStCHEM School of Chemistry, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9ST, United Kingdom
  • 3. Departamento de Química Física, Universidad de Alicante, E-03080 Alicante, Spain
  • 4. Dipartimento di Chimica Industriale "Toso Montanari", Università di Bologna, I-40136 Bologna, Italy

Description

Unlike conventional thermally activated delayed fluorescence chromophores, boron-centered azatriangulene-like molecules combine a small excited-state singlet-triplet energy gap with high oscillator strengths and minor reorganization energies. Here, using highly correlated quantum-chemical calculations, we report this is driven by short-range reorganization of the electron density taking place upon electronic excitation of these multi-resonant structures. Based on this finding, we design a series of π-extended boron- and nitrogen-doped nanographenes as promising candidates for efficient thermally activated delayed fluorescence emitters with concomitantly decreased singlet-triplet energy gaps, improved oscillator strengths and core rigidity compared to previously reported structures, permitting both emission color purity and tunability across the visible spectrum.

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Funding

MILORD – Managing trIplets for fLuorescence in ORganics: Towards a predictive moDel (MILORD) 748042
European Commission