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Exceptionally fast radiative decay of a dinuclear platinum complex through thermally activated delayed fluorescence.

Piotr PanderRuth DanielsAndrey V ZaytsevAshleigh HornAmit SilThomas J PenfoldJ A Gareth WilliamsValery N KozhevnikovFernando B Dias
Published in: Chemical science (2021)
A novel dinuclear platinum(ii) complex featuring a ditopic, bis-tetradentate ligand has been prepared. The ligand offers each metal ion a planar O^N^C^N coordination environment, with the two metal ions bound to the nitrogen atoms of a bridging pyrimidine unit. The complex is brightly luminescent in the red region of the spectrum with a photoluminescence quantum yield of 83% in deoxygenated methylcyclohexane solution at ambient temperature, and shows a remarkably short excited state lifetime of 2.1 μs. These properties are the result of an unusually high radiative rate constant of around 4 × 105 s-1, a value which is comparable to that of the very best performing Ir(iii) complexes. This unusual behaviour is the result of efficient thermally activated reverse intersystem crossing, promoted by a small singlet-triplet energy difference of only 69 ± 3 meV. The complex was incorporated into solution-processed OLEDs achieving EQEmax = 7.4%. We believe this to be the first fully evidenced report of a Pt(ii) complex showing thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) at room temperature, and indeed of a Pt(ii)-based delayed fluorescence emitter to be incorporated into an OLED.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
  • light emitting
  • air pollution
  • particulate matter
  • sensitive detection