The dielectric response of amorphous organic solids at the timescale of atomic motion has broad implications for their photophysics, governing spectroscopic properties and excited-state relaxation, among other phenomena. We present an original approach to the calculation of the vibrational contribution to the frequency-dependent dielectric permittivity. Our methodology, combining molecular dynamics simulations, density functional theory calculations, and linear response theory, is applied to a set of amorphous carbazole-based small-molecule matrices, widely used as host materials in organic light-emitting diodes. Our analysis reveals the crucial role of hindered molecular rotations (librations) in the solid-state matrices of dipolar compounds. These modes manifest in the very-low frequency (<100 cm−1 ) region of the dielectric function, accounting for up to one-third of the total vibrational contribution to the static dielectric constant in a dipolar compound like 3,3’-di(carbazol-9-yl)-5-cyano-1,1’-biphenyl. This low-frequency contribution is found to be crucial for determining the variations in the static dielectric constant across various materials.
Dielectric permittivity of small-molecule matrices for organic optoelectronics: The key contribution of solid state molecular dynamics / Giavazzi, Davide; Painelli, Anna; Grisanti, Luca; D'Avino, Gabriele. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS. - ISSN 2475-9953. - 10:2(2026). [10.1103/fc1j-sp6w]
Dielectric permittivity of small-molecule matrices for organic optoelectronics: The key contribution of solid state molecular dynamics
Giavazzi, Davide;Painelli, Anna;Grisanti, Luca;D'Avino, Gabriele
2026-01-01
Abstract
The dielectric response of amorphous organic solids at the timescale of atomic motion has broad implications for their photophysics, governing spectroscopic properties and excited-state relaxation, among other phenomena. We present an original approach to the calculation of the vibrational contribution to the frequency-dependent dielectric permittivity. Our methodology, combining molecular dynamics simulations, density functional theory calculations, and linear response theory, is applied to a set of amorphous carbazole-based small-molecule matrices, widely used as host materials in organic light-emitting diodes. Our analysis reveals the crucial role of hindered molecular rotations (librations) in the solid-state matrices of dipolar compounds. These modes manifest in the very-low frequency (<100 cm−1 ) region of the dielectric function, accounting for up to one-third of the total vibrational contribution to the static dielectric constant in a dipolar compound like 3,3’-di(carbazol-9-yl)-5-cyano-1,1’-biphenyl. This low-frequency contribution is found to be crucial for determining the variations in the static dielectric constant across various materials.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


