An Air- and Water-Stable B4 N4 -Heteropentalene Serving as a Host Material for a Phosphorescent OLED.
Junki KashidaYoshiaki ShojiYasuhiro IkabataHideo TakaHayato SakaiTaku HasobeHiromi NakaiTakanori FukushimaPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Replacement of the carbon-carbon bonds of antiaromatic compounds with polar boron-nitrogen bonds often provides isoelectronic BN compounds with excellent thermodynamic stability and interesting photophysical properties. By this element-substitution strategy, we synthesized a new B4 N4 -heteropentalene derivative, 1, which is fully substituted with mesityl groups. Owing to kinetic protection by the sterically bulky substituents, 1 is remarkably stable toward air and even water. Single-crystal X-ray analysis of 1 revealed the bonding characteristics of the B4 N4 -heteropentalene structure. In a glassy matrix, 1 emitted short-wavelength phosphorescence with an onset at 350 nm, indicating that the triplet energy is substantially high. DFT calculations reasonably explained the ground- and excited-state electronic structures of 1 as well as its emission properties. Motivated by the high-energy triplet state of 1, we used it as a host material to fabricate a phosphorescent organic light-emitting diode with an external quantum efficiency of 15 %.
Keyphrases
- light emitting
- density functional theory
- energy transfer
- molecular dynamics
- molecular docking
- high resolution
- room temperature
- molecular dynamics simulations
- monte carlo
- single cell
- ionic liquid
- solid state
- photodynamic therapy
- mass spectrometry
- quantum dots
- dual energy
- amino acid
- electron microscopy
- walled carbon nanotubes