Phenylethenyl‐Substituted Triphenylamines: Efficient,Easily Obtainable,and Inexpensive Hole‐Transporting Materials |
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Authors: | Dr. Tadas Malinauskas Dr. Maryte Daskeviciene Dr. Giedre Bubniene Ieva Petrikyte Steponas Raisys Dr. Karolis Kazlauskas Dr. Valentas Gaidelis Dr. Vygintas Jankauskas Dr. Robertas Maldzius Prof. Saulius Jursenas Prof. Vytautas Getautis |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Organic Chemistry, Kaunas University of Technology, Radvilenu pl. 19, Kaunas, 50254 (Lithuania), Fax: (+370)?37‐300152;2. Institute of Applied Research, Vilnius University, Sauletekio 9‐III, 10222, Vilnius (Lithuania);3. Department of Solid State Electronics, Vilnius University, Sauletekio 9, Vilnius, 10222 (Lithuania) |
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Abstract: | Star‐shaped charge‐transporting materials with a triphenylamine (TPA) core and various phenylethenyl side arm(s) were obtained in a one‐step synthetic procedure from commercially available and relatively inexpensive starting materials. Crystallinity, glass‐transition temperature, size of the π‐conjugated system, energy levels, and the way molecules pack in the solid state can be significantly influenced by variation of the structure of these side arm(s). An increase in the number of phenylethenyl side arms was found to hinder intramolecular motions of the TPA core, and thereby provide significant enhancement of the fluorescence quantum yield of the TPA derivatives in solution. On the other hand, a larger number of side arms facilitated exciton migration through the dense side‐arm network formed in the solid state and, thus, considerably reduces fluorescence efficiency by migration‐assisted nonradiative relaxation. This dense network enables charges to move more rapidly through the hole‐transport material layer, which results in very good charge drift mobility (μ up to 0.017 cm2 V ?1 s?1). |
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Keywords: | amorphous materials fluorescence spectroscopy ionization potentials luminescence semiconductors |
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