| Literature DB >> 34040727 |
Yunxiang Lei1, Junfang Yang2, Wenbo Dai3, Yisha Lan3, Jianhui Yang3, Xiaoyan Zheng2, Jianbing Shi3, Bin Tong3, Zhengxu Cai3, Yuping Dong3.
Abstract
Organic host-guest doped materials exhibiting the room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) phenomenon have attracted considerable attention. However, it is still challenging to investigate their corresponding luminescence mechanism, because for host-guest systems, it is very difficult to obtain single crystals compared to single-component or co-crystal component materials. Herein, we developed a series of organic doped materials with triphenylamine (TPA) as the host and TPA derivatives with different electron-donating groups as guests. The doped materials showed strong fluorescence, thermally activated delayed fluorescence (τ: 39-47 ms), and efficient room temperature phosphorescence (Φ phos: 7.3-9.1%; τ: 170-262 ms). The intensity ratio between the delayed fluorescence and phosphorescence was tuned by the guest species and concentration. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to simulate the molecular conformation of guest molecules in the host matrix and the interaction between the host and guest molecules. Therefore, the photophysical properties were calculated using the QM/MM model. This work provides a new concept for the study of molecular packing of guest molecules in the host matrix. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040727 PMCID: PMC8132935 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc01175h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1(a) The molecular structures of the guest and host molecules. (b) The fluorescence (top) and phosphorescence (down) images of the four host–guest doped materials (excitation wavelength: 360 nm). (c) Delayed emission spectra of host–guest doped materials (delay time: 5 ms). (d) Prompt and delayed spectra of the MADBA guest and MADBA/TPA doped materials (MADBA: solution state, 1.0 × 10−4 mol L−1, Ex.: 360 nm, 77 K). (e) Delayed decay curves of the host–guest doped materials at an emission wavelength of 520 nm (Ex.: 360 nm). (f) Delayed emission intensity of the MADBA/TPA material at different temperatures (Ex.: 360 nm, delay time: 5 ms). (g) TADF intensity of the MADBA/TPA material at different temperatures. (h) Delayed emission spectra of the MADBA/TPA materials with different amounts of MADBA (molar ratio, Ex.: 360 nm, delay time: 5 ms).
Photophysical properties of the guests and doped materialsa
| Sample | Fluo. | Phos. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| |
| DBA | 387 | 43 | 1.8 | 486 | 13.2 | 545 |
| MDBA | 392 | 45 | 1.9 | 488 | 10.7 | 623 |
| MODBA | 395 | 47 | 2.2 | 492 | 12.4 | 661 |
| MADBA | 404 | 51 | 2.3 | 508 | 11.8 | 728 |
| DBA/TPA | 385 | 76 | 2.4 | 386 | 7.3 | 45 |
| MDBA/TPA | 389 | 77 | 1.8 | 388 | 8.1 | 39 |
| MODBA/TPA | 392 | 75 | 2.1 | 390 | 8.6 | 40 |
| MADBA/TPA | 403 | 70 | 2.3 | 405 | 9.2 | 42 |
Guest : host = 1 : 1000 (molar ratio).
In THF solution, 1.0 × 10−4 mol L−1.
At 77 K.
Delayed fluorescence; excitation wavelength: 360 nm for phosphorescence and 320 nm for fluorescence.
Fig. 2(a) Proposed transfer path between the guest and host. (b) The LUMO and HOMO of guest and host molecules. (c) The energy levels of the guests and host.
Fig. 3(a and b) Model setup of the MADBA/TPA doped system. (c) The molecular configuration of the simulated MADBA/TPA doped system. (d) Molecular packing along the b-axis in the TPA single crystal. (e) Molecular packing along the b-axis of the simulated MADBA/TPA doped system. (f) Molecular packing along the c-axis of the TPA single crystal. (g) Molecular packing along the c-axis of the simulated MADBA/TPA doped system. (h) The interaction distance of C–H⋯π between a MADBA molecule and surrounding host molecules. The distances between each phenyl ring center of the MADBA molecule and the hydrogen atoms of the TPA molecules are labelled with a blue line. The corresponding distance between the phenyl ring center of TPA and the hydrogen atoms of MADBA are labelled with a pink line.
Fig. 4(a) The number of carbon atoms in the MADBA guest molecule. (b) Hirshfeld surface for the MADBA/TPA system mapped with a dnorm distance. The C–H⋯π interactions are shown in red on the surface. (c) Hirshfeld surface for the MADBA crystal state mapped with a dnorm distance. The C–H⋯π interactions are shown in red on the surface. (d and e) The calculated energy level diagram, spin–orbit couplings (ξ) between singlet and triplet states, and the oscillator strengths of the S1 state in the crystal based on the optimized first triplet-state geometries using the ONIOM method for the doped system and MADBA crystalline state.