Intrinsically stretchable three primary light-emitting films enabled by elastomer blend for polymer light-emitting diodes.
Min Woo JeongJin Hyun MaJae Seung ShinJun Su KimGuorong MaTae Uk NamXiaodan GuSeong Jun KangJin Young OhPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Intrinsically stretchable light-emitting materials are crucial for skin-like wearable displays; however, their color range has been limited to green-like yellow lights owing to the restricted stretchable light-emitting materials (super yellow series materials). To develop skin-like full-color displays, three intrinsically stretchable primary light-emitting materials [red, green, and blue (RGB)] are essential. In this study, we report three highly stretchable primary light-emitting films made from a polymer blend of conventional RGB light-emitting polymers and a nonpolar elastomer. The blend films consist of multidimensional nanodomains of light-emitting polymers that are interconnected in an elastomer matrix for efficient light-emitting under strain. The RGB blend films exhibited over 1000 cd/m 2 luminance with low turn-on voltage (<5 V on ) and the selectively stretched blend films on rigid substrate maintained stable light-emitting performance up to 100% strain even after 1000 multiple stretching cycles.