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      Understanding the efficiency drooping of the deep blue organometallic phosphors: a computational study of radiative and non-radiative decay rates for triplets

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          Abstract

          Efficiency drooping in blue phosphorescent iridium complexes has been rationalized through figuring out key molecular parameters to control the radiative and non-radiative rates at the first-principles level.

          Abstract

          High-efficiency deep blue organometallic phosphors are imperative to organic luminescence devices. While green iridium complexes commonly exhibit high luminescence efficiencies, the luminescence quantum efficiency always drops sharply when emission becomes deep blue. In this work, the microscopic mechanism of such a drastic decrease is elucidated from detailed computational investigation. Both radiative ( k r) and non-radiative ( k nr) decay rates of the lowest triplet state (T 1) are calculated for five representative cyclometalated iridium( iii) complexes with emission color ranging from green to deep blue, based on phenylpyridyl, phenylpyrazolyl, bipyridinato, pyrimidinpyridyl, and pyrimidinprazolyl ligands. For all compounds, the T 1 states are characteristic of mixed intraligand (π → π*) transition and iridium-to-ligand charge transfer (d → π*), and the increased π → π* and decreased d → π* portions lead to the blue-shifted emission of 1 < 2 < 4 < 5 < 3. Strikingly, it is found that the drastic increase of k nr arising from severe intra-ligand vibration relaxations induced by the enhanced π → π* transition is mainly responsible for the droop of the phosphorescence quantum efficiency, which provides a different deactivation mechanism from the thermally-activated transformation into a dark metal-centred ligand field excited state reported in many previous studies. Compared with the well-studied compounds 1–3, the newly designed compounds 4 and 5 achieve a good balance between high efficiency and a large energy gap and are very promising as deep blue phosphors. These findings are expected to be helpful for the rational design of high-efficiency blue organometallic phosphors, especially in terms of ligands.

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          Highly efficient phosphorescent emission from organic electroluminescent devices

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            Multilayer white light-emitting organic electroluminescent device.

            Organic electroluminescent devices are light-emitting diodes in which the active materials consist entirely of organic materials. Here, the fabrication of a white light-emitting organic electroluminescent device made from vacuum-deposited organic thin films is reported. In this device, three emitter layers with different carrier transport properties, each emitting blue, green, or red light, are used to generate white light. Bright white light, over 2000 candelas per square meter, nearly as bright as a fluorescent lamp, was successfully obtained at low drive voltages such as 15 to 16 volts. The applications of such a device include paper-thin light sources, which are particularly useful for places that require lightweight illumination devices, such as in aircraft and space shuttles. Other uses are a backlight for liquid crystal display as well as full color displays, achieved by combining the emitters with micropatterned color filters.
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              Efficient blue organic light-emitting diodes employing thermally activated delayed fluorescence

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JMCCCX
                Journal of Materials Chemistry C
                J. Mater. Chem. C
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7526
                2050-7534
                2016
                2016
                : 4
                : 28
                : 6829-6838
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences (BNLMS)
                [2 ]CAS Key Laboratory of Organic Solids
                [3 ]Institute of Chemistry
                [4 ]Chinese Academy of Sciences
                [5 ]Beijing 100190
                [6 ]College of Environmental and Energy Engineering
                [7 ]Beijing University of Technology
                [8 ]Beijing 100124
                [9 ]China
                [10 ]Key Laboratory of Organic Optoelectronics and Molecular Engineering
                [11 ]Department of Chemistry
                [12 ]Tsinghua University
                [13 ]Beijing 100084
                Article
                10.1039/C6TC00858E
                95c96dc2-7112-45e9-bea8-66149df0b4f5
                © 2016
                History

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