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Multiresonance thermally-activated delayed fluorescence (MR-TADF) emitters have gained popularity given their potential of attaining negligible singlet-triplet energy gaps, i. e. , ΔEST, without hindering emission, thus increasing the reverse and direct intersystem crossing rates without affecting fluorescence. This is achieved due to the singlet and triplet states' short-range charge transfer character (SRCT). Thus, obtaining quantitative information about SRCT would help developing new MR-TADF emitters. This work studies three different families of MR-TADF emitters: DOBOA, DiKTa and OQAO. First, we compute their adiabatic ΔEST with four different methods (TDA-CAM-B3LYP, STEOM-DLPNO-CCSD, ADC (2) and SCS-CC2). Then, we compute fluorescence (kᵣ), direct (kISC), and reverse (kᵣISC) intersystem crossing rate constants. For kᵣ, we assess the effect of different levels of approximations on the rate calculations. We show that kᵣ do not depend significantly on the different harmonic models (adiabatic Hessian or vertical Hessian), coordinate systems, and broadening widths. Moreover, Herzberg-Teller effects are negligible for kᵣ but they are the main contribution for kISC and kRISC. The computed rate constants agree well with the experimental results. Moreover, we propose the use of two wavefunction descriptors – Qₐᵗ and LOCa – based on the 1-particle transition density matrix, which assigns the amount of charge centered on the atoms. We compute these descriptors for three transitions: S0→S1, S0→T1, and S1→T1. For the studied cases, these descriptors are independent of the choice of electronic structure method and optimal geometry. We show that the adiabatic ΔEST decreases with the increase of S1→T1 Qₐᵗ, while ΔEST increases with an increase of the S0 →T1 Qₐᵗ. These trends showcase how the Qₐᵗ values can act as guiding descriptors to design new MR-TADF emitters with small ΔEST values.
Casal et al. (Thu,) studied this question.