R. Giro, Silas Pereira Lima Filho, et al.
OTCB 2019
Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) devices in the archetype small-molecule fluorescent guest-host system tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato) aluminum (Alq3) doped with 4-(dicyanomethylene)-2-methyl-6-julolidyl-9-enyl-4H-pyran (DCM2) displays a redshift in light-emission frequency which is extremely sensitive to the dopant concentration. This effect can be used to tune the emission frequency in this particular class of OLEDs. In this work, a model is proposed to describe this effect using a combination of density functional theory quantum-chemical calculations and stochastic simulations of exciton diffusion via a Förster mechanism. The results show that the permanent dipole moments of the Alq3 molecules generate random electric fields that are large enough to cause a nonlinear Stark shift in the band gap of neighboring DCM2 molecules. As a consequence of these nonlinear shifts, a non-Gaussian probability distribution of highest occupied molecular orbital to lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (HOMO-LUMO) gaps for the DCM2 molecules in the Alq3 matrix is observed, with long exponential tails to the low-energy side. Surprisingly, this probability distribution of DCM2 HOMO-LUMO gaps is virtually independent of DCM2 concentration into the Alq3 matrix, at least up to a fraction of 10%. This study shows that this distribution of gaps, combined with out-of-equilibrium exciton diffusion among DCM2 molecules, is sufficient to explain the experimentally observed emission redshift.
R. Giro, Silas Pereira Lima Filho, et al.
OTCB 2019
R. Giro, Peter William Bryant, et al.
OTC Brasil 2015
Guilherme C.Q. da Silva, R. Giro, et al.
Journal of Molecular Liquids
Mathias B. Steiner, Michael Engel, et al.
EORC 2015