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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Tordera is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Tordera.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Simple, Fast, Bright, and Stable Light Sources

Daniel Tordera; Sebastian Meier; Martijn Lenes; Rubén D. Costa; Enrique Ortí; Wiebke Sarfert; Henk J. Bolink

In this work we show that solution-processed light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) based on only an ionic iridium complex and a small amount of ionic liquid exhibit exceptionally good performances when applying a pulsed current: sub-second turn-on times and almost constant high luminances (>600 cd m(-2) ) and power efficiencies over the first 600 h. This demonstrates the potential of LECs for applications in solid-state signage and lighting.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011

Copper(I) complexes for sustainable light-emitting electrochemical cells

Rubén D. Costa; Daniel Tordera; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink; Jonas Schönle; Stefan Graber; Catherine E. Housecroft; Edwin C. Constable; Jennifer A. Zampese

Four prototype heteroleptic copper(I) complexes [Cu(bpy)(pop)][PF6] (bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine, pop = bis(2-(diphenylphosphino)phenyl)ether), [Cu(phen)(pop)][PF6] (phen = 1,10-phenanthroline), [Cu(bpy)(pdpb)][PF6] (pdpb = 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)benzene) and [Cu(phen)(pdpb)][PF6] are presented. The synthesis, X-ray structures, solution and solid-state photophysical studies, and the performance in light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) of these complexes are described. Their photophysical properties are interpreted with the help of density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The photophysical studies in solution and in the solid-state indicate that these copper(I) complexes show good luminescent properties which allow them to be used as active materials in electroluminescent devices such as LECs. Additionally, these materials are very attractive since we can take advantage of their low-cost, due to the copper abundance, and their limited environmental damaging effects for producing cheap large-area panels based on the LEC technology for lighting applications. LEC devices were fabricated using the four prototype copper(I) complexes together with an ionic liquid (IL), 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluoridophosphate, at a molar ratio of 1 : 1. They yield devices that are comparable to those obtained for most LEC devices based on ruthenium(II) and iridium(III) complexes. Hence, this work shows that promising electroluminescent devices can be prepared using cheap and environmentally friendly copper(I) complexes.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2013

A deep-blue emitting charged bis-cyclometallated iridium(III) complex for light-emitting electrochemical cells

Sebastian Meier; Wiebke Sarfert; José M. Junquera-Hernández; Manuel Delgado; Daniel Tordera; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink; Florian Kessler; Rosario Scopelliti; Michael Grätzel; M. Khaja Nazeeruddin; Etienne Baranoff

We report here a new cationic bis-cyclometallated iridium(III) complex, 1, with deep-blue emission at 440 nm and its use in Light-emitting Electrochemical Cells (LECs). The design is based on the 2′,6′-difluoro-2,3′-bipyridine skeleton as the cyclometallating ligand and a bis-imidazolium carbene-type ancillary ligand. Furthermore, bulky tert-butyl substituents are used to limit the intermolecular interactions. LECs have been driven both at constant voltage (6 V) and constant current (2.5 mA cm−2). The performances are significantly improved with the latter method, resulting overall in one of the best reported greenish-blue LECs having fast response (17 s), light intensity over 100 cd m−2 and a reasonable efficiency of almost 5 cd A−1.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Highly Luminescent Half-Lantern Cyclometalated Platinum(II) Complex: Synthesis, Structure, Luminescence Studies, and Reactivity.

Violeta Sicilia; Juan Forniés; Jose M. Casas; Antonio Martín; José A. López; Carmen Larraz; Pilar Borja; Carmen Ovejero; Daniel Tordera; Henk J. Bolink

The half-lantern compound [{Pt(bzq)(μ-C(7)H(4)NS(2)-κN,S)}(2)]·Me(2)CO (1) was obtained by reaction of equimolar amounts of potassium 2-mercaptobenzothiazolate (KC(7)H(4)NS(2)) and [Pt(bzq)(NCMe)(2)]ClO(4). The Pt(II)···Pt(II) separation in the neutral complex [{Pt(bzq)(μ-C(7)H(4)NS(2)-κN,S)}(2)] is 2.910 (2) Å, this being among the shortest observed in half-lantern divalent platinum complexes. Within the complex, the benzo[h]quinoline (bzq) groups lie in close proximity with most C···C distances being between 3.3 and 3.7 Å, which is indicative of significant π-π interactions. The reaction of 1 with halogens X(2) (X(2) = Cl(2), Br(2), or I(2)) proceeds with a two-electron oxidation to give the corresponding dihalodiplatinum(III) complexes [{Pt(bzq)(μ-C(7)H(4)NS(2)-κN,S)X}(2)] (X = Cl 2, Br 3, I 4). Their X-ray structures confirm the retention of the half-lantern structure and the coordination mode of the bzq and the bridging ligand μ-C(7)H(4)NS(2)-κN,S. The Pt-Pt distances (Pt-Pt = 2.6420(3) Å 2, 2.6435(4) Å 3, 2.6690(3) Å 4) are shorter than that in 1 because of the Pt-Pt bond formation. Time dependent-density functional theory (TD-DFT) studies performed on 1 show a formal bond order of 0 between the metal atoms, with the 6p(z) contribution diminishing the antibonding character of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and being responsible for an attractive intermetallic interaction. A shortening of the Pt-Pt distance from 2.959 Å in the ground state S(0) to 2.760 Å in the optimized first excited state (T(1)) is consistent with an increase in the Pt-Pt bond order to 0.5. In agreement with TD-DFT calculations, the intense, structureless, red emission of 1 in the solid state and in solution can be mainly attributed to triplet metal-metal-to-ligand charge transfer ((3)MMLCT) [dσ*(Pt-Pt) → π*(bzq)] excited states. The high quantum yields of this emission measured in toluene (44%) and solid state (62%) at room temperature indicate that 1 is a very efficient and stable (3)MMLCT emitter, even in solution. The high luminescence quantum yield of its red emission, added to its neutral character and the thermal stability of 1, make it a potential compound to be incorporated as phosphorescent dopant in multilayer organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Light-emitting electrochemical cells using cyanine dyes as the active components.

Antonio Pertegás; Daniel Tordera; Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink

Light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) based on cyanine molecules were prepared. High photoluminescence quantum yields were obtained for host-guest films using two cyanine dyes, reaching 27%. Sandwiching these films in between two electrodes allows for very stable near-infrared emission with a maximum radiant flux of 1.7 W m(-2) at an external quantum efficiency of 0.44%.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

Efficient Green-Light-Emitting Electrochemical Cells Based on Ionic Iridium Complexes with Sulfone-Containing Cyclometalating Ligands

Daniel Tordera; Andreas M. Bünzli; Antonio Pertegás; José M. Junquera-Hernández; Edwin C. Constable; Jennifer A. Zampese; Catherine E. Housecroft; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink

A new approach to obtain green-emitting iridium(III) complexes is described. The synthetic approach consists of introducing a methylsulfone electron-withdrawing substituent into a 4-phenylpyrazole cyclometalating ligand in order to stabilize the highest-occupied molecular orbital (HOMO). Six new complexes have been synthesized incorporating the conjugate base of 1-(4-(methylsulfonyl)phenyl)-1H-pyrazole as the cyclometalating ligand. The complexes show green emission and very high photoluminescence quantum yields in both diluted and concentrated films. When used as the main active component in light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs), green electroluminance is observed. High efficiencies and luminances are obtained at low driving voltages. This approach for green emitters is an alternative to the widely used fluorine-based substituents in the cyclometalating ligands and opens new design possibilities for the synthesis of green emitters for LECs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Universal Transients in Polymer and Ionic Transition Metal Complex Light-Emitting Electrochemical Cells

Stephan van Reenen; Takeo Akatsuka; Daniel Tordera; M Martijn Kemerink; Henk J. Bolink

Two types of light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) are commonly distinguished, the polymer-based LEC (p-LEC) and the ionic transition metal complex-based LEC (iTMC-LEC). Apart from marked differences in the active layer constituents, these LEC types typically show operational time scales that can differ by many orders of magnitude at room temperature. Here, we demonstrate that despite these differences p-LECs and iTMC-LECs show current, light output, and efficacy transients that follow a universal shape. Moreover, we conclude that the turn-on time of both LEC types is dominated by the ion conductivity because the turn-on time exhibits the same activation energy as the ion conductivity in the off-state. These results demonstrate that both types of LECs are really two extremes of one class of electroluminescent devices. They also implicate that no fundamental difference exists between charge transport in small molecular weight or polymeric mixed ionic and electronic conductive materials. Additionally, it follows that the ionic conductivity is responsible for the dynamic properties of devices and systems using them. This likely extends to mixed ionic and electronic conductive materials used in organic solar cells and in a variety of biological systems.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

Efficient orange light-emitting electrochemical cells

Daniel Tordera; Antonio Pertegás; Nail M. Shavaleev; Rosario Scopelliti; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink; Etienne Baranoff; Michael Grätzel; Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin

We report the first bis-cyclometalated cationic iridium(III) complex with N-aryl-substituted 1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthroline. The complex emits yellow-orange phosphorescence with a maximum at 583 nm, a quantum yield of 43%, and an excited-state lifetime of 910 ns in argon-saturated dichloromethane. Optimized orange light-emitting electrochemical cells with the new Ir(III) complex exhibit fast turn-on, a peak luminance of 684 cd m−2 and a peak efficacy of 6.5 cd A−1; in 850 h of continuous operation their luminance and efficacy decrease only by 20%.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2013

Pulsed-current versus constant-voltage light-emitting electrochemical cells with trifluoromethyl-substituted cationic iridium(III) complexes

Nail M. Shavaleev; Rosario Scopelliti; Michael Grätzel; Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin; Antonio Pertegás; Cristina Roldán-Carmona; Daniel Tordera; Henk J. Bolink

We report on five cationic iridium(III) complexes with cyclometalating 2-(3′-trifluoromethylphenyl)pyridine and a diimine, [(C⁁N)2Ir(N⁁N)](PF6), N⁁N = 4,4′-R2-2,2′-dipyridyl or 4,7-R2-1,10-phenanthroline (R = H, Me, tert-Bu, Ph), and characterize three of them by crystal structure analysis. The complexes undergo oxidation of the Ir–aryl fragment at 1.13–1.16 V (against ferrocene couple) and reduction of the N⁁N ligand at −1.66 V to −1.86 V, and have a redox gap of 2.84–2.99 V. The complexes exhibit bluish-green to green-yellow phosphorescence in an argon-saturated dichloromethane solution at room temperature with a maximum at 486–520 nm, quantum yield of 61–67%, and an excited-state lifetime of 1.2–4.3 μs. In two-layer spin-coated light-emitting electrochemical cells (LEC) operated at a constant-voltage (4 V) or a pulsed-current (100 A m−2 per pulse; block wave, 1000 Hz; 50% duty), the complexes exhibit green-yellow electroluminescence with a maximum at 547–556 nm. The luminance and efficiency of LEC do not level off after peaking but decay; for example, the luminance of the devices after reaching the peak of 195–1094 cd m−2 halves in 9–580 min. The best of the new LEC runs under pulsed-current driving and exhibits peak efficiencies of 16.8 cd A−1 and 7.9 lm W−1 and an EQE of 5.4% at a luminance of ≥834 cd m−2. We find that the pulsed-current LEC offer the following advantages over the constant-voltage LEC: lower current, higher stability, faster turn-on, and higher efficiency at higher luminance.


Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2014

Host–guest blue light-emitting electrochemical cells

Antonio Pertegás; Nail M. Shavaleev; Daniel Tordera; Enrique Ortí; Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin; Henk J. Bolink

Carbazole, a commonly used hole-transporter for organic electronics, has been modified with an imidazolium cation and a hexafluorophosphate counter-anion to give an ionic hole-transporter. It has been applied as one of the hosts in a host–guest blue light-emitting electrochemical cell (LEC) with the neutral blue emitter FIrPic. We have obtained efficient and bright blue LECs with an electroluminescence maximum at 474 nm and efficacy of 5 cd A−1 at a luminance of 420 cd m−2, thereby demonstrating the potential of the ionic organic charge-transporters and of the host–guest architecture for LECs.

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