Delayed Fluorescence from Inverted Singlet and Triplet Excited States for Efficient Organic Light-Emitting Diodes. Miyajima, D., Aizawa, N., Pu, Y., Nihonyanagi, A., Ibuka, R., Inuzuka, H., Dhara, B., Koyama, Y., & Araoka, F. Technical Report In Review, May, 2021.
Delayed Fluorescence from Inverted Singlet and Triplet Excited States for Efficient Organic Light-Emitting Diodes [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Abstract Hund’s multiplicity rule states that for a given electronic configuration, a higher spin state has a lower energy. Rephrasing this rule for molecular excited states predicts a positive energy gap between spin-singlet and spin-triplet excited states, which has been consistent with numerous experimental observations over almost a century. Here, we report a fluorescent molecule that disobeys Hund’s rule, possessing a negative singlet–triplet energy gap of –11 meV. The energy inversion of the singlet and triplet excited states results in delayed fluorescence with short time constants of 0.2 μs, which anomalously decrease with decreasing temperature due to the emissive singlet character of the lowest-energy excited state. Organic light-emitting diodes using this molecule exhibited a fast transient electroluminescence decay with a peak external quantum efficiency of 17%, demonstrating potential implications for optoelectronic devices, including displays, lighting, and lasers.
@techreport{miyajima_delayed_2021,
	type = {preprint},
	title = {Delayed {Fluorescence} from {Inverted} {Singlet} and {Triplet} {Excited} {States} for {Efficient} {Organic} {Light}-{Emitting} {Diodes}},
	url = {https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-478258/v1},
	abstract = {Abstract
          Hund’s multiplicity rule states that for a given electronic configuration, a higher spin state has a lower energy. Rephrasing this rule for molecular excited states predicts a positive energy gap between spin-singlet and spin-triplet excited states, which has been consistent with numerous experimental observations over almost a century. Here, we report a fluorescent molecule that disobeys Hund’s rule, possessing a negative singlet–triplet energy gap of –11 meV. The energy inversion of the singlet and triplet excited states results in delayed fluorescence with short time constants of 0.2 μs, which anomalously decrease with decreasing temperature due to the emissive singlet character of the lowest-energy excited state. Organic light-emitting diodes using this molecule exhibited a fast transient electroluminescence decay with a peak external quantum efficiency of 17\%, demonstrating potential implications for optoelectronic devices, including displays, lighting, and lasers.},
	urldate = {2021-09-16},
	institution = {In Review},
	author = {Miyajima, Daigo and Aizawa, Naoya and Pu, Yong-Jin and Nihonyanagi, Atsuko and Ibuka, Ryotaro and Inuzuka, Hiroyuki and Dhara, Barun and Koyama, Yuki and Araoka, Fumito},
	month = may,
	year = {2021},
	doi = {10.21203/rs.3.rs-478258/v1},
}

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