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Turn on of sky-blue thermally activated delayed fluorescence and circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) via increased torsion by a bulky carbazolophane donor.

Nidhi SharmaEduard SpulingCornelia M MatternWenbo LiOliver FuhrYouichi TsuchiyaChihaya AdachiStefan BräseIfor D W SamuelEli Zysman-Colman
Published in: Chemical science (2019)
The carbazolophane (Czp) donor unit (indolo[2.2]paracyclophane) is introduced to the design pool of donors in thermally activated delayed fluorescence emitters. The increased steric bulk of the annelated donor unit forces an increased torsion between the carbazole and the aryl bridge resulting in a decreased ΔE ST and an enhancement of the thermally activated delayed fluorescence in the triazine-containing emitter CzpPhTrz. Further, the closely stacked carbazole and benzene units of the paracyclophane show through-space π-π interactions, effectively increasing the spatial occupation for the HOMO orbital. The chiroptical properties of enantiomers of [2.2]paracyclophane reveal mirror image circular dichroism (CD) and circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) with g lum of 1.3 × 10-3. rac-CzpPhTrz is a sky-blue emitter with λ PL of 480 nm, a very small ΔE ST of 0.16 eV and high Φ PL of 70% in 10 wt% doped DPEPO films. Sky blue-emitting OLEDs were fabricated with this new TADF emitter showing a high maximum EQE of 17% with CIE coordinates of (0.17, 0.25). A moderate EQE roll-off was also observed with an EQE of 12% at a display relevant luminance of 100 cd m-2. Our results show that the Czp donor contributes to both a decreased ΔE ST and an increased photoluminescence quantum yield, both advantageous in the molecular design of TADF emitters.
Keyphrases
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