Spin- and Voltage-dependent emission from Intra- and Intermolecular TADF OLEDs
Nikolai Bunzmann, Benjamin Krugmann, Sebastian Weissenseel, Liudmila, Kudriashova, Khrystyna Ivaniuk, Pavlo Stakhira, Vladyslav Cherpak, Marian, Chapran, Gintare Grybauskaite-Kaminskiene, Juozas Vidas Grazulevicius,, Vladimir Dyakonov, Andreas Sperlich

TL;DR
This study investigates spin-dependent emission mechanisms in intra- and intermolecular TADF OLEDs, revealing voltage-controlled emission, excited state dynamics, and triplet wavefunction extent using magnetic resonance techniques.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the spin-dependent processes and excited state interactions in TADF OLEDs through advanced magnetic resonance methods.
Findings
Voltage-controlled emission from exciplex and intramolecular TADF states
Activation energy for triplet to singlet up-conversion determined
Triplet wavefunction extent estimated to be >1.2 nm
Abstract
Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) based on thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) utilize molecular systems with a small energy splitting between singlet and triplet states. This can either be realized in intramolecular charge transfer states of molecules with near-orthogonal donor and acceptor moieties or in intermolecular exciplex states formed between a suitable combination of individual donor and acceptor materials. Here, we investigate 4,4'-(9H,9'H-[3,3'-bicarbazole]-9,9'-diyl)bis(3-(trifluoromethyl) benzonitrile) (pCNBCzoCF3), which shows intramolecular TADF but can also form exciplex states in combination with 4,4',4''-tris[phenyl(m-tolyl)amino]triphenylamine (m-MTDATA). Orange emitting exciplex-based OLEDs additionally generate a sky-blue emission from the intramolecular emitter with an intensity that can be voltage-controlled. We apply electroluminescence detected…
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