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Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials

The standard procedure to identify the hole- or electron-acceptor character of amorphous organic materials used in OLEDs is to look at the values of a pair of basic parameters, namely, the ionization potential (IP) and the electron affinity (EA). Recently, using published experimental data, the pres...

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Autores principales: San-Fabián, Emilio, Louis, Enrique, Díaz-García, María A., Chiappe, Guillermo, Vergés, José A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6384593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30744125
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24030609
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author San-Fabián, Emilio
Louis, Enrique
Díaz-García, María A.
Chiappe, Guillermo
Vergés, José A.
author_facet San-Fabián, Emilio
Louis, Enrique
Díaz-García, María A.
Chiappe, Guillermo
Vergés, José A.
author_sort San-Fabián, Emilio
collection PubMed
description The standard procedure to identify the hole- or electron-acceptor character of amorphous organic materials used in OLEDs is to look at the values of a pair of basic parameters, namely, the ionization potential (IP) and the electron affinity (EA). Recently, using published experimental data, the present authors showed that only IP matters, i.e., materials with IP > 5.7 (<5.7) showing electron (hole) acceptor character. Only three materials fail to obey this rule. This work reports ab initio calculations of IP and EA of those materials plus two materials that behave according to that rule, following a route which describes the organic material by means of a single molecule embedded in a polarizable continuum medium (PCM) characterized by a dielectric constant [Formula: see text]. PCM allows to approximately describe the extended character of the system. This “compound” system was treated within density functional theory (DFT) using several combinations of the functional/basis set. In the preset work [Formula: see text] was derived by assuming Koopmans’ theorem to hold. Optimal [Formula: see text] values are in the range 4.4–5.0, close to what is expected for this material family. It was assumed that the optical gap corresponds to the excited state with a large oscillator strength among those with the lowest energies, calculated with time-dependent DFT. Calculated exciton energies were in the range 0.76–1.06 eV, and optical gaps varied from 3.37 up to 4.50 eV. The results are compared with experimental data.
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spelling pubmed-63845932019-02-23 Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials San-Fabián, Emilio Louis, Enrique Díaz-García, María A. Chiappe, Guillermo Vergés, José A. Molecules Article The standard procedure to identify the hole- or electron-acceptor character of amorphous organic materials used in OLEDs is to look at the values of a pair of basic parameters, namely, the ionization potential (IP) and the electron affinity (EA). Recently, using published experimental data, the present authors showed that only IP matters, i.e., materials with IP > 5.7 (<5.7) showing electron (hole) acceptor character. Only three materials fail to obey this rule. This work reports ab initio calculations of IP and EA of those materials plus two materials that behave according to that rule, following a route which describes the organic material by means of a single molecule embedded in a polarizable continuum medium (PCM) characterized by a dielectric constant [Formula: see text]. PCM allows to approximately describe the extended character of the system. This “compound” system was treated within density functional theory (DFT) using several combinations of the functional/basis set. In the preset work [Formula: see text] was derived by assuming Koopmans’ theorem to hold. Optimal [Formula: see text] values are in the range 4.4–5.0, close to what is expected for this material family. It was assumed that the optical gap corresponds to the excited state with a large oscillator strength among those with the lowest energies, calculated with time-dependent DFT. Calculated exciton energies were in the range 0.76–1.06 eV, and optical gaps varied from 3.37 up to 4.50 eV. The results are compared with experimental data. MDPI 2019-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6384593/ /pubmed/30744125 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24030609 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
San-Fabián, Emilio
Louis, Enrique
Díaz-García, María A.
Chiappe, Guillermo
Vergés, José A.
Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title_full Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title_fullStr Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title_full_unstemmed Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title_short Transport and Optical Gaps in Amorphous Organic Molecular Materials
title_sort transport and optical gaps in amorphous organic molecular materials
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6384593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30744125
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24030609
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