Quantum-Classical Computational Molecular Design of Deuterated High-Efficiency OLED Emitters

Abstract

This study describes a hybrid quantum-classical computational approach for designing synthesizable deuterated Alq3 emitters possessing desirable emission quantum efficiencies (QEs). This design process has been performed on the tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato) ligands typically bound to aluminum in Alq3. It involves a multi-pronged approach which first utilizes classical quantum chemistry to predict the emission QEs of the Alq3 ligands. These initial results were then used as a machine learning dataset for a factorization machine-based model which was applied to construct an Ising Hamiltonian to predict emission quantum efficiencies on a classical computer. We show that such a factorization machine-based approach can yield accurate property predictions for all 64 deuterated Alq3 emitters with 13 training values. Moreover, another Ising Hamiltonian could be constructed by including synthetic constraints which could be used to perform optimizations on a quantum simulator and device using the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) and quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) to discover a molecule possessing the optimal QE and synthetic cost. We observe that both VQE and QAOA calculations can predict the optimal molecule with greater than 0.95 probability on quantum simulators. These probabilities decrease to 0.83 and 0.075 for simulations with VQE and QAOA, respectively, on a quantum device, but these can be improved to 0.90 and 0.084 by mitigating readout error. Application of a binary search routine on quantum devices improves these results to a probability of 0.97 for simulations involving VQE and QAOA.

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