Abstract
The S1 state and high-lying triplet excited states (𝚫ES1Tn) offers insight into clarifying the mechanism of efficiency roll-off of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). However, experimental detection of the 𝚫ES1Tn is challenging due to Kasha’s rule. Here, we report two emitters, PhCz-O-DiKTa and PhCz-DiKTa, showing multi-resonant thermally activated delayed fluorescence (MR-TADF). By modulating the conjugation between the MR-TADF DiKTa emissive center and donor substituent, emission directly from the T2 state was for the first time observed in MR-TADF emitters. Single crystal and reduced density gradient (RDG) analyses reveal that the origin of the reduced observed concentration-quenching results from weak CH and slipped stacking interactions, which suppress nonradiative transitions. Theoretical and photophysical investigations reveal that the 𝚫ES1T2 difference influences the reverse intersystem crossing (RISC) rate. The OLEDs employing PhCz-O-DiKTa and PhCz-DiKTa as emitters show maximum external quantum efficiencies (EQEmax) of over 20%, but very different efficiency roll-off behavior (54.5% vs 13.6% at 100 cd m-2). Thus, this design provides a possible solution to mitigating device efficiency roll-off by designing MR-TADF emitters with degenerate S1 and T2 states.
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