TADF offers a promising way to harvest triplets in OLED for improved efficiency. To concurrently optimize the dye inside the matrix, a thorough experimental and theoretical study is presented of a the TADF dye addressing environmental effects.
We present a detailed and comprehensive picture of the
photophysics
of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF). The approach relies
on a few-state model, parametrized ab initio on a
prototypical TADF dye, that explicitly accounts for the nonadiabatic
coupling between electrons and vibrational and conformational motion,
crucial to properly address (reverse) intersystem crossing rates.
The Onsager model is exploited to account for the medium polarity
and polarizability, with careful consideration of the different time
scales of relevant degrees of freedom. TADF photophysics is then quantitatively
addressed in a coherent and exhaustive approach that accurately reproduces
the complex temporal evolution of emission spectra in liquid solvents
as well as in solid organic matrices. The different rigidity of the
two environments is responsible for the appearance in matrices of
important inhomogeneous broadening phenomena that are ascribed to
the intertwined contribution from (quasi)static conformational and
dielectric disorder.
A novel approch to estimate intersystem and reverse intersystem crossing rates (ISC and RISC rates, respectively) is proposed. We build on an essential state model recently parametrized {\it ab initio}...
The effective design of dyes optimized for thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) requires the precise control of two tiny energies: the singlet-triplet gap, which has to be maintained within thermal energy, and the strength of spin-orbit coupling. A subtle interplay among low-energy excited states having dominant charge-transfer and local character then governs TADF efficiency, making models for environmental effects both crucial and challenging. The main message of this paper is a warning to the community of chemists, physicists, and material scientists working in the field: the adiabatic approximation implicitly imposed to the treatment of fast environmental degrees of freedom in quantum-classical and continuum solvation models leads to uncontrolled results. Several approximation schemes were proposed to mitigate the issue, but we underline that the adiabatic approximation to fast solvation is inadequate and cannot be improved; rather, it must be abandoned in favor of an antiadiabatic approach.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.