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A "Flexible" Purely Organic Molecule Exhibiting Strong Spin-Orbital Coupling: Toward Nondoped Room-Temperature Phosphorescence OLEDs.

Weidong QiuXinyi CaiZijian ChenXiaofan WeiMengke LiQing GuXiaomei PengWentao XieYihang JiaoYiyang GanWeimin LiuShi-Jian Su
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
Purely organic materials usually exhibit weak spin-orbital coupling (SOC) effect because of the lack of noble heavy metals, and the generation and direct emission from the triplet state is spin-forbidden. This would lead to slow intersystem crossing, long triplet lifetime, and low phosphorescence quantum yield. Herein, strong spin-orbital coupling between singlet and triplet was observed in a "flexible" and twist thianthrene-pyrimidine-based purely organic compound in an amorphous film state, which shows a fast intersystem crossing process and a high phosphorescence rate of 1.1 × 10 3 s -1 . The heavy atom sulfur and nitrogen atoms in the molecule can provide n-π* transition character for efficient spin-orbital coupling. Moreover, the flexible molecule skeleton enables conformational change and molecular vibration in excited states, which was proved to be vital for efficient vibrational spin-orbital coupling. Benefitting from the strong SOC effect, a nondoped purely organic phosphorescence light-emitting diode was fabricated, which achieves a maximum external quantum efficiency of 7.98%, corresponding to an exciton utilization ratio exceeding 87.6%.
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