Non-radiative decay and stability of $N$-heterocyclic carbene iridium(III) complexes
Xiuwen Zhou, Benjamin J. Powell

TL;DR
This study uses computational methods to analyze the non-radiative decay mechanisms in deep-blue iridium complexes with N-heterocyclic carbene ligands, revealing pathways that influence stability and efficiency in OLEDs.
Contribution
It identifies the Ir-C bond elongation as a key pathway affecting non-radiative decay and demonstrates the reversibility of the $^3$MLCT to $^3$MC transition, informing design for more stable blue emitters.
Findings
Elongation of Ir-C bonds leads to non-radiative decay.
Reversible $^3$MLCT to $^3$MC transition in NHC complexes.
Correlation between barrier height and non-radiative decay rate.
Abstract
Devices based on deep-blue emitting iridium (III) complexes with N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands have recently been shown to give excellent performance as phosphorescent organic light-emitting diodes (PHOLEDs). To facilitate the design of even better deep-blue phosphorescent emitters we carried out density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the lowest triplet () potential-energy surfaces (PES) upon lengthening the iridium-ligand (Ir-C) bonds. Relativistic time dependent-DFT (TDDFT) calculations demonstrate that this changes the nature of from a highly-emissive metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) state to a metal centered (MC) state where the radiative decay rate is orders of magnitude slower than that of the MLCT state. We identify the elongation of an Ir-C bond on the NHC group as the pathway with lowest energy barrier between the MLCT and MC…
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