Dicopper
complexes with thermally activated delayed fluorescence
(TADF) phenomena are important in enriching the arsenal of organic
light-emitting diodes materials. However, the TADF mechanism is still
elusive, especially in the solid state. Herein, we chose a TADF dicopper
complex and investigated its geometric and electronic structures and
absorption and emission spectra using DFT, TD-DFT, and QM/MM methods.
On the basis of these results, we further estimate the fluorescence
emission rate from the S1 state, phosphorescence emission
rate from the T1 state, and forward and reverse intersystem
crossing (ISC and rISC) rates between S1 and T1. The present work shows that both the S1 and the T1 states have mixed metal-to-ligand and interligand charge-transfer
character. Good spatial separation between the HOMO and the LUMO makes
the S1–T1 energy gap small, ca. 2.8 kcal/mol.
This small energy gap leads to efficient ISC and rISC processes, whose
rates are much larger than the fluorescence and phosphorescence emission
rates at 300 K, therefore enabling TADF. In contrast, at 77 K, the
rISC process is blocked because its rate is much smaller than the
phosphorescence emission. Thus, TADF disappears at 77 K. Further analysis
shows that high-frequency deformation and low-frequency torsional
vibrational modes make a large contribution to the Huang–Rhys
factors, but Duschinsky rotation effects are essentially negligible
for both the ISC and the rISC processes