4.8 Article

Highly efficient organic light-emitting diodes from delayed fluorescence

Journal

NATURE
Volume 492, Issue 7428, Pages 234-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11687

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Funding

  1. Funding Program for World-Leading Innovative R&D on Science and Technology (FIRST)
  2. International Institute for Carbon Neutral Energy Research (WPI-I2CNER)
  3. Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

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The inherent flexibility afforded by molecular design has accelerated the development of a wide variety of organic semiconductors over the past two decades. In particular, great advances have been made in the development of materials for organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), from early devices based on fluorescent molecules(1) to those using phosphorescent molecules(2,3). In OLEDs, electrically injected charge carriers recombine to form singlet and triplet excitons in a 1:3 ratio(1); the use of phosphorescent metal-organic complexes exploits the normally non-radiative triplet excitons and so enhances the overall electroluminescence efficiency(2,3). Here we report a class of metal-free organic electroluminescent molecules in which the energy gap between the singlet and triplet excited states is minimized by design(4), thereby promoting highly efficient spin up-conversion from non-radiative triplet states to radiative singlet states while maintaining high radiative decay rates, of more than 10(6) decays per second. In other words, these molecules harness both singlet and triplet excitons for light emission through fluorescence decay channels, leading to an intrinsic fluorescence efficiency in excess of 90 per cent and a very high external electroluminescence efficiency, of more than 19 per cent, which is comparable to that achieved in high-efficiency phosphorescence-based OLEDs(3).

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