Abstract

A series of [(C^N)2 Ir(acac)] complexes [{5-(2-R-CB)ppy}2 Ir(acac)] (3 a-3 g; acac=acetylacetonate, CB=o-carboran-1-yl, ppy=2-phenylpyridine; R=H (3 a), Me (3 b), iPr (3 c), iBu (3 d), Ph (3 e), CF3 C6 H4 (3 f), C6 F5 (3 g)) with various 2-R-substituted o-carboranes at the 5-position in the phenyl ring of the ppy ligand were prepared. X-ray diffraction studies revealed that the carboranyl CC bond length increases with increasing steric and electron-withdrawing effects from the 2-R substituents. Although the absorption and emission wavelengths of the complexes are almost invariant to the change of 2-R group, the phosphorescence quantum efficiency varies from highly emissive (ΦPL ≈0.80 for R=H, alkyl) to poorly emissive (R=aryl) depending on the 2-R group and the polarity of the medium. Theoretical studies suggest that 1) the almost nonemissive nature of the 2-aryl-substituted complexes is mainly attributable to the large contribution to the LUMO in the S1 excited state from an o-carborane unit and 2) the variation in the CC bond length between the S0 and T1 state structures increases with increasing steric (2-alkyl) and electronic effects (2-aryl) of the 2-R substituent and the polarity of the solvent. The solution-processed electroluminescence (EL) devices that incorporated 3 b and 3 d as emitters displayed higher performance than the device based on the parent [(ppy)2 Ir(acac)] complex. Along with the high phosphorescence efficiency, the bulkiness of the 2-R-o-carborane unit is shown to play an important role in improving device performance.

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