4.8 Article

A Multifunctional Blue-Emitting Material Designed via Tuning Distribution of Hybridized Excited-State for High-Performance Blue and Host-Sensitized OLEDs

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 30, Issue 35, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202002323

Keywords

aggregation-induced emission; charge-transfer states; energy transfer; hot exciton mechanism; organic light-emitting diodes

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21788102, 51673118, 21975077]
  2. Science & Technology Program of Guangzhou [201804010218, 201804020027]
  3. Innovation and Technology Commission of Hong Kong [ITC-CNERC14S01]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2019ZD04]
  5. Fund of Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Luminescence from Molecular Aggregates [2019B030301003]

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Actualizing full singlet exciton yield via a reverse intersystem crossing from the high-lying triplet state to singlet state, namely, hot exciton mechanism, holds great potential for high-performance fluorescent organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). However, incorporating comprehensive insights into the mechanism and effective molecular design strategies still remains challenging. Herein, three blue emitters (CNNPI, 2TriPE-CNNPI, and 2CzPh-CNNPI) with a distinct local excited (LE) state and charge-transfer (CT) state distributions in excited states are designed and synthesized. They show prominent hybridized local and charge-transfer (HLCT) states and aggregation-induced emission enhancement properties. The hot exciton mechanism based on these emitters reveals that a balanced LE/CT distribution can simultaneously boost photoluminescence efficiency and exciton utilization. In particular, a nearly 100% exciton utilization is achieved in the electroluminescence (EL) process of 2CzPh-CNNPI. Moreover, employing 2CzPh-CNNPI as the emitter, emissive dopant, and sensitizing host, respectively, the EL performances of the corresponding nondoped pure-blue, doped deep-blue, and HLCT-sensitized fluorescent OLEDs are among the most efficient OLEDs with a hot exciton mechanism to date. These results could shed light on the design principles for hot exciton materials and inspire the development of next-generation high-performance OLEDs.

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