S. M. King
Durham University
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Publication
Featured researches published by S. M. King.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2011
S. M. King; M. Cass; M. Pintani; C. Coward; Fernando B. Dias; Andrew P. Monkman; M. Roberts
We demonstrate that the fast initial decay of a prototypical fluorescent polymer based organic light emitting diode device is related to the contribution that triplet–triplet annihilation makes to the device efficiency. We show that, during typical operating conditions, approximately 20% of the device efficiency originates from the production of singlet excitons by triplet–triplet annihilation. During prolonged device operation, the triplet excitons are quenched much more easily than the emissive singlets; thus, the contribution to the efficiency from triplet–triplet annihilation is lost during the early stages of the device lifetest. The fast initial decay of the device luminance can be removed by incorporating a triplet quenching additive into the active layer to remove any effect of triplet–triplet annihilation; this yields an increase in the device lifetime of greater than 3× and an even more significant improvement in the initial luminance decay.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010
Lars-Olof Pålsson; Changsheng Wang; Andrei S. Batsanov; S. M. King; Andrew Beeby; Andrew P. Monkman; Martin R. Bryce
Studies are reported on a series of triphenylamine-(C[triple bond]C)(n)-2,5-diphenyl-1,3,4-oxadiazole dyad molecules (n=1-4, 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively) and the related triphenylamine-C(6)H(4)-(C[triple bond]C)(3)-oxadiazole dyad 5. The oligoyne-linked D-pi-A (D=electron donor, A=electron acceptor) dyad systems have been synthesised by palladium-catalysed cross-coupling of terminal alkynyl and butadiynyl synthons with the corresponding bromoalkynyl moieties. Cyclic voltammetric studies reveal a reduction in the HOMO-LUMO gap in the series of compounds 1-4 as the oligoyne chain length increases, which is consistent with extended conjugation through the elongated bridges. Photophysical studies provide new insights into conjugative effects in oligoyne molecular wires. In non-polar solvents the emission from these dyad systems has two different origins: a locally excited (LE) state, which is responsible for a pi*-->pi fluorescence, and an intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state, which produces charge-transfer emission. In polar solvents the LE state emission vanishes and only ICT emission is observed. This emission displays strong solvatochromism and analysis according to the Lippert-Mataga-Oshika formalism shows significant ICT for all the luminescent compounds with high efficiency even for the longer more conjugated systems. The excited-state properties of the dyads in non-polar solvents vary with the extent of conjugation. For more conjugated systems a fast non-radiative route dominates the excited-state decay and follows the Engelman-Jortner energy gap law. The data suggest that the non-radiative decay is driven by the weak coupling limit.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
S. M. King; R. Matheson; Fernando B. Dias; Andrew P. Monkman
The triplet yield and intersystem crossing rate of a set of conjugated oligomers and polymers that, in polar solvents, form a charge-transfer state with a twisted conformation has been investigated. It was observed that in these dibenzothiophene-fluorene oligomers a greater than 10-fold increase on the triplet yield is achieved by simply changing the medium polarity to favor the formation of the twisted charge-transfer state, while the fluorescence lifetime is only slightly increased. The increase in the intersystem crossing rate is attributed to the improved mixing between the singlet and triplet states in the twisted excited state. In analogous polymers, the intersystem crossing rate does not show the same increase, most likely because of the greater energetic and conformational disorder increasing the intersystem crossing rate at all times, regardless of the formation of the twisted charge-transfer state or not.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Susanne I. Hintschich; C. Rothe; S. M. King; Stewart J. Clark; Andrew P. Monkman
In this study, we report on the unusual fluorescence decay of an alkoxy-substituted polyspirobifluorene. Excited state behavior has been probed as a function of time, using femtosecond photobleaching, single photon counting, and streak camera techniques. Unusually complex decay kinetics are observed, which strongly depend on solvent viscosity and polarity, featuring decay components in both the tens of picoseconds and in the nanosecond time domain. These findings are explained by the consequences of spiroconjugation in combination with excited-state conformational relaxation. We propose that exciton wave function delocalization into the spiro units effectively traps the exciton, allowing it to relax further into a highly emissive state with a very long lifetime as compared to non-spiroconjugated polymer analogues. Frontier molecular orbitals and exciton orbitals have been calculated using a first principles density functional theory (DFT) approach. These results confirm the importance of spiroconjugation as both the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and the (lowest) exciton level are not localized on the polymer backbone but strongly extend into the side fluorene groups of the spirobifluorene units. The results of our calculations are very sensitive to the substitution pattern on the spirobifluorene units, in particular when oxygen is included. This finding may lead to new materials of this kind with optimized charge carrier transport properties and high luminescence quantum yields.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006
S. M. King; C. Rothe; D. Dai; Andrew P. Monkman
Measurement of the quantum yield of triplet formation has been made for the prototypical conjugated polymer polyspirobifluorene in solution and solid state. An updated method has been described based on femtosecond time resolved ground state recovery following photoexcitation of the polymer. The two components to the recovery of the ground state due to the decay of the singlet and triplet excited states are clearly visible and from these it is possible to calculate Phi(T)=0.05+/-0.01 in solution, this gives k(isc)=5.4 x 10(7) s(-1) which compares favorably with other conjugated polymers. In polymer films an increased triplet yield of Phi(T)=0.12+/-0.02 is found to be independent of temperature, the increased yield is attributed to triplet recombination from charged states.
Proceedings of the IEEE | 2009
Andrew P. Monkman; C. Rothe; S. M. King
A major potential difference between polymer and small molecule organic light-emitting devices is the possibility of spin-dependent charge recombination in the latter. In this case, the singlet exciton formation yield, one of the key parameters that determines device efficiencies, deviates from the simple quantum mechanical spin statistics prediction of 25%. For polymers, the departure from this limit has been demonstrated by several indirect measurements yielding a wide spread values from 25% up to 95% and by ourselves using a direct measurement on working devices at 44%. These results clearly indicate that polymer-based devices hold a unique advantage over small molecule-based devices. Comment will be made to these various measurement techniques along with an insight into current theoretical ideas that can explain the departure from the quantum spin statistical limit.OLEDs.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014
Marek Szablewski; Mark A. Fox; Fernando B. Dias; Hannah Namih; Edward W. Snedden; S. M. King; D. Dai; Lars-Olof Pålsson
Three diaminodicyanoquinodimethanes, 4-(R(1)R(2)C)-1-[(NC)2C]-C6H4 (R(1),R(2) = H2N, 1; R(1) = 3,5-Me2-4-OCH4H6N-, R(2) = H2N, 2; R(1) = 3,5-Me2-4-OCH4H6N-, R(2) = 4-Me-C5H9N, 3), were investigated using carbon-13 NMR, steady-state, and ultrafast transient absorption and ultrafast fluorescence spectroscopies to unravel the unusual characteristics of this class of chromophores. Computed (GIAO)B3LYP/6-31G* data for the zwitterions 1-3 using necessary solvation (PCM) models were shown to be in excellent agreement with observed structural and carbon-13 NMR data. The ground-state geometries of 1-3 contain a cationic methine group R(1)R(2)C- twisted from the C6H4 ring and an anionic methine group (NC)2C- in plane with the C6H4 ring in solution and solid state. The (13)C chemical shifts of the peak corresponding to the methine carbon at the (NC)2C- group of 1-3 are observed at 32.5-34.7 ppm, which are some 55 ppm upfield compared with the (13)C chemical shift for the methine carbons in TCNQ, 1,4-[(NC)2C]2-C6H4. The decay of the excited state in diaminodicyanoquinodimethanes is fast and dominated by nonradiative processes on the picosecond time scale, which depends on the viscosity of the medium. The dynamics of the excited-state decay is therefore limited by conformational changes through an intramolecular twisting motion. This twisting motion is hindered by friction, which, in turn, also depends on the functional group size of the system. The dominant nonradiative pathways after excitation are due to twisted excited-state conformers according to TD-DFT computations.
Advanced Functional Materials | 2009
S. M. King; Irene I. Perepichka; Igor F. Perepichka; Fernando B. Dias; Martin R. Bryce; Andrew P. Monkman
Advanced Functional Materials | 2006
S. M. King; Hameed A. Al-Attar; R. J. Evans; A. Congreve; Andrew Beeby; Andrew P. Monkman
Physical Review Letters | 2006
C. Rothe; S. M. King; Andrew P. Monkman