Litcius/Paper detail

Blue organic light-emitting diode with a turn-on voltage of 1.47 V

Seiichiro Izawa, Masahiro Morimoto, Keisuke Fujimoto, Koki Banno, Yutaka Majima, Masaki Takahashi, Shigeki Naka, Masahiro Hiramoto

2023Nature Communications55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Among the three primary colors, blue emission in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are highly important but very difficult to develop. OLEDs have already been commercialized; however, blue OLEDs have the problem of requiring a high applied voltage due to the high-energy of blue emission. Herein, an ultralow voltage turn-on at 1.47 V for blue emission with a peak wavelength at 462 nm (2.68 eV) is demonstrated in an OLED device with a typical blue-fluorescent emitter that is widely utilized in a commercial display. This OLED reaches 100 cd/m 2 , which is equivalent to the luminance of a typical commercial display, at 1.97 V. Blue emission from the OLED is achieved by the selective excitation of the low-energy triplet states at a low applied voltage by using the charge transfer (CT) state as a precursor and triplet-triplet annihilation, which forms one emissive singlet from two triplet excitons.

Topics & Concepts

DiodeTurn (biochemistry)OptoelectronicsLight-emitting diodeBlue lightMaterials scienceVoltageChemistryElectrical engineeringBiochemistryEngineeringOrganic Light-Emitting Diodes ResearchOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsConducting polymers and applications