Carbene-metal complexes as molecular scaffolds for construction of through-space TADF emitters

28 October 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Through-space charge transfer (CT) process is observed in Cu(I) carbene-metal-amide complexes, where conventional imidazole or imidazoline N-heterocyclic (NHC) carbene fragments act as inert linkers and CT proceeds between a metal-bound carbazole donor and a distantly situated carbene-bound phenylsulfonyl acceptor. The resulting electron transfer gives a rise to efficient thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF), characterized with high photoluminescence quantum yields (ΦPL up to 90 %) and radiative rates (kr) up to 3.32×105 s-1. TADF process is aided by fast reverse intersystem crossing (rISC) rates of up to 2.56×107 s-1. Such emitters can be considered as hybrids of two existing TADF emitter design strategies, combining low singlet-triplet energy gaps (ΔEST) met in all-organic exciplex-like emitters (0.0062−0.0075 eV) and small, but non-negligible spin-orbital coupling (SOC) provided by Cu atom, like in TADF-active organometallic complexes.

Keywords

carbene metal amides
TADF
through-space charge transfer
thermally activated delayed fluorescence
copper
NHC
N-heterocyclic carbene
carbene ligand

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Information
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Additional figures and tables, formulas used for the calculation of emission kinetics parameters, NMR spectra, cyclic voltammetry curves, atomic coordinates of DFT optimized structures.
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