posted on 2021-06-22, 20:35authored byZi-Wen Li, Ling-Ya Peng, Xiu-Fang Song, Wen-Kai Chen, Yuan-Jun Gao, Wei-Hai Fang, Ganglong Cui
The
Pd complex PdN3N exhibits an unusual dual emission of room-temperature
phosphorescence (RTP) and thermally activated delayed fluorescence
(TADF), but the mechanism is elusive. Herein, we employed both density
functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TD-DFT) methods to
explore excited-state properties of this Pd complex, which shows that
the S0, S1, T1, and T2 states are involved in the luminescence. Both the S1 →
T1 and S1 → T2 intersystem
crossing (ISC) processes are more efficient than the S1 fluorescence and insensitive to temperature. However, the direct
T1 → S1 and T2-mediated T1 → T2 → S1 reverse ISC
(rISC) processes change remarkably with temperature. At 300 K, these
two processes are more efficient than the T1 phosphorescence
and therefore enable TADF. Importantly, the T1 →
S1 rISC and T1 phosphorescence rates are comparable
at 300 K, which leads to dual emissions of TADF and RTP, whereas these
two channels become blocked at 100 K so that only the T1 phosphorescence is recorded experimentally.