The first tandem, all-exciplex-based WOLED.

Sci Rep

1] Department of Chemistry, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan [2] Center for Emerging Material and Advanced Devices, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan.

Published: June 2014

Exploiting our recently developed bilayer interface methodology, together with a new wide energy-gap, low LUMO acceptor (A) and the designated donor (D) layers, we succeeded in fabricating an exciplex-based organic light-emitting diode (OLED) systematically tuned from blue to red. Further optimization rendered a record-high blue exciplex OLED with η(ext) of 8%. We then constructed a device structure configured by two parallel blend layers of mCP/PO-T2T and DTAF/PO-T2T, generating blue and yellow exciplex emission, respectively. The resulting device demonstrates for the first time a tandem, all-exciplex-based white-light OLED (WOLED) with excellent efficiencies η(ext): 11.6%, η(c): 27.7 cd A(-1), and η(p): 15.8 ml W(-1) with CIE(0.29, 0.35) and CRI 70.6 that are nearly independent of EL intensity. The tandem architecture and blend-layer D/A (1:1) configuration are two key elements that fully utilize the exciplex delay fluorescence, providing a paragon for the use of low-cost, abundant organic compounds en route to commercial WOLEDs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4044637PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep05161DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tandem all-exciplex-based
8
all-exciplex-based woled
4
woled exploiting
4
exploiting developed
4
developed bilayer
4
bilayer interface
4
interface methodology
4
methodology wide
4
wide energy-gap
4
energy-gap low
4

Similar Publications

The first tandem, all-exciplex-based WOLED.

Sci Rep

June 2014

1] Department of Chemistry, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan [2] Center for Emerging Material and Advanced Devices, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan.

Exploiting our recently developed bilayer interface methodology, together with a new wide energy-gap, low LUMO acceptor (A) and the designated donor (D) layers, we succeeded in fabricating an exciplex-based organic light-emitting diode (OLED) systematically tuned from blue to red. Further optimization rendered a record-high blue exciplex OLED with η(ext) of 8%. We then constructed a device structure configured by two parallel blend layers of mCP/PO-T2T and DTAF/PO-T2T, generating blue and yellow exciplex emission, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!