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Room Temperature Phosphorescence vs Triplet–Triplet Annihilation in N-Substituted Acridone Solids

Ehsan Hamzehpoor, Cory Ruchlin, Yuze Tao, Jorge Ramos-Sánchez, Hatem M. Titi, Gonzalo Cosa, Dmitrii F. Perepichka

2021The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters36 citationsDOI

Abstract

Organic room temperature phosphorescent (ORTP) compounds have recently emerged as a promising class of emissive materials with a multitude of potential applications. However, the number of building blocks that give rise to efficient ORTP materials is still limited, and the rules for engineering phosphorescent properties in organic solids are not well understood. Here, we report ORTP in a series of N-substituted acridone derivatives with electron-donating, electron-withdrawing, and sterically bulky substituents. X-ray crystallography shows that the solid-state packing varies progressively between coparallel and antiparallel π-stacking and separated π-dimers, depending on the size of the substituent. The detailed photophysical studies supported by DFT calculations reveal complex dynamics of singlet and triplet excited states, depending on the electronic effects of substituents and solid-state packing. The programmable molecular packing provides a lever to control the triplet–triplet annihilation that is manifested as delayed fluorescence in acridone derivatives with continuous (both parallel and antiparallel) π-stacking.

Topics & Concepts

AcridonePhosphorescenceStackingAntiparallel (mathematics)Excited statePhotochemistrySubstituentSteric effectsAnnihilationChemistryFluorescenceTriplet stateCarbazoleMaterials scienceCrystallographyMoleculeStereochemistryOrganic chemistryAtomic physicsPhysicsMagnetic fieldQuantum mechanicsLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsOrganic Light-Emitting Diodes ResearchOrganoboron and organosilicon chemistry
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