Chemical Stabilities of the Lowest Triplet State in Aryl Sulfones and Aryl Phosphine Oxides Relevant to OLED Applications

  • Huifang Li
  • , Minki Hong
  • , Annabelle Scarpaci
  • , Xuyang He
  • , Chad Risko
  • , John S. Sears
  • , Stephen Barlow
  • , Paul Winget
  • , Seth R. Marder
  • , Dongwook Kim
  • , Jean Luc Brédas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aryl sulfones and phosphine oxides are widely used as molecular building blocks for host materials in the emissive layers of organic light-emitting diodes. In this context, the chemical stability of such molecules in the triplet state is of paramount concern to long-term device performance. Here, we explore the triplet excited-state (T 1 ) chemical stabilities of aryl sulfonyl and aryl phosphoryl molecules by means of UV absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. Both the sulfur-carbon bonds of the aryl sulfonyl molecules and the phosphorus-carbon bonds of aryl phosphoryl derivatives are significantly more vulnerable to dissociation in the T 1 state when compared to the ground (S 0 ) state. Although the vertical S 0 ? T 1 transitions correspond to nonbonding ? ?-orbital transitions, geometry relaxations in the T 1 state lead to σ-σ∗ character over the respective sulfur-carbon or phosphorus-carbon bond, a result of significant electronic state mixing, which facilitates bond dissociation. Both the activation energy for bond dissociation and the bond dissociation energy in the T 1 state are found to vary linearly with the adiabatic T 1 -state energy. Specifically, as T 1 becomes more energetically stable, the activation energy becomes larger, and dissociation becomes less likely, that is, more endothermic or less exothermic. While substitutions of electron-donating or -accepting units onto the aryl sulfones and aryl phosphine oxides have only marginal influence on the dissociation reactions, extension of the ?-conjugation of the aryl groups leads to a significant reduction in the triplet energy and a considerable enhancement in the T 1 -state chemical stabilities.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1507-1519
Number of pages13
JournalChemistry of Materials
Volume31
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 12 2019
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemistry
  • General Chemical Engineering
  • Materials Chemistry

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