Sub-Second Long Lifetime Triplet Exciton Reservoir for Highly Efficient and Stable Organic Light-Emitting Diode.
Zhenyu TangFang LyuJiannan GuHaoqing GuoWenjin YuYu ZouLefan GongRong TangBo QuXuan GuoYan ChenYongkai DengMengying BianYan LiDongdong ZhangMingyang WeiSo Min ParkPan XiaYao LvQihuang GongShufeng WangZhijian ChenLixin XiaoPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
In organic light-emitting diode (OLED), achieving high efficiency requires effective triplet exciton confinement by carrier-transporting materials, which typically have higher triplet energy (E T ) than the emitter, leading to poor stability. Here, an electron-transporting material (ETM), whose E T is 0.32 eV lower than that of the emitter is reported. In devices, it surprisingly exhibits strong confinement effect and generates excellent efficiency. Additionally, the device operational lifetime is 4.9 times longer than the device with a standard ETM, 1,3,5-tri(1-phenyl-1H-benzo[d]imidazol-2-yl) phenyl (whose E T 0.36 eV is higher than the emitter). This anomalous finding is ascribed to the exceptionally long triplet state lifetime (≈0.2 s) of the ETM. It is named as long-lifetime triplet exciton reservoir effect. The systematic analysis reveals that the long triplet lifetime of ETM can compensate the requirement for high E T with the help of endothermic energy transfer. Such combination of low E T and long lifetime provides equivalent exciton confinement effect and high molecular stability simultaneously. It offers a novel molecular design paradigm for breaking the dilemma between high efficiency and prolonged operational lifetime in OLEDs.