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The Role of Balancing Carrier Transport in Realizing an Efficient Orange-Red Thermally Activated Delayed-Fluorescence Organic Light-Emitting Diode.

Ji-Hua TanJia-Ming JinWen-Cheng ChenChen CaoRuifang WangZe-Lin ZhuYan-Ping HuoChun-Sing Lee
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Simultaneously realizing improved carrier mobility and good photoluminescence (PL) efficiency in red thermally activated delayed-fluorescence (TADF) emitters remains challenging but important. Herein, two isomeric orange-red TADF emitters, o PDM and p PDM, with the same basic donor-acceptor backbone but a pyrimidine ( Pm ) attachment at different positions are designed and synthesized. The two emitters show similarly good PL properties, including narrow singlet-triplet energy offsets (0.11 and 0.15 eV) and high photoluminescence quantum yields (ca. 100 and 88%) in doped films. An orange-red organic light-emitting diode (OLED) employing o PDM as an emitter achieves an almost twice as high maximum external quantum efficiency (28.2%) compared with that of a p PDM-based OLED. More balanced carrier-transporting properties are responsible for their contrasting device performances, and the position effect of the Pm substituent leads to significantly distinct molecular packing behaviors in the aggregate states and different carrier mobilities.
Keyphrases
  • light emitting
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • particulate matter
  • water soluble
  • air pollution
  • single molecule
  • molecular dynamics
  • heavy metals