Abstract
Molecules with an inverted energy gap between their first singlet and triplet excited states have promising applications in the next generation of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials. Unfortunately, such molecules are rare and only a handful of examples are currently known. High-throughput virtual screening could assist in finding novel classes of these molecules, but current efforts are hampered by the high computational cost of the required quantum-chemical methods. We present a method based on the semi-empirical Pariser-Parr-Pople theory augmented by perturbation theory and show that it reproduces inverted gaps at a fraction of the cost of currently employed excited state calculations.. Our study paves the way for ultra-high-throughput virtual screening and inverse design to accelerate the discovery and development of this new generation of OLED materials.
Supplementary materials
Title
Electronic supporting information
Description
Definition of classification metrics, semi-empirical parameters, additional figures and tables.
Actions