An extremely high-efficiency solution-processed white organic light-emitting diode (WOLED) is successfully developed by simultaneously using an ideal dendritic host material and a novel efficient orange phosphorescent iridium complex. The optimized device exhibits forward-viewing efficiencies of 70.6 cd A(-1) , 26.0%, and 47.6 lm W(-1) at a luminance of 100 cd m(-2) , respectively, promising the low-cost solution-processed WOLEDs a bright future as the next generation of illumination sources.
White polymer light‐emitting devices with a peak forward‐viewing power efficiency close to 40 lm W−1, corresponding to an external quantum efficiency of 28.8% and a luminous efficiency of 60 cd A−1, are demonstrated. The devices are based on two newly synthesized yellow‐emitting iridium complexes functionalized with the sterically hindered diarylfluorene chromophores and are fabricated by a simple solution‐processing method.
The synthesis, isomeric studies, and photophysical characterization of a series of multifunctional cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes containing a fluoro- or methyl-substituted 2-[3-(N-phenylcarbazolyl)]pyridine molecular framework are presented. All of the complexes are thermally stable solids and highly efficient electrophosphors. The optical, electrochemical, photo-, and electrophosphorescence traits of these iridium phosphors have been studied in terms of the electronic nature and coordinating site of the aryl or pyridyl ring substituents. The correlation between the functional properties of these phosphors and the results of density functional theory calculations was made. Arising from the propensity of the electron-rich carbazolyl group to facilitate hole injection/transport, the presence of such a moiety can increase the highest-occupied molecular orbital levels and improve the charge balance in the resulting complexes relative to the parent phosphor with 2-phenylpyridine ligands. Remarkably, the excited-state properties can be manipulated through ligand and substituent effects that allow the tuning of phosphorescence energies from bluish green to deep red. Electrophosphorescent organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) with outstanding device performance can be fabricated based on these materials, which show a maximum current efficiency of approximately 43.4 cd A(-1), corresponding to an external quantum efficiency of approximately 12.9 % ph/el (photons per electron) and a power efficiency of approximately 33.4 Lm W(-1) for the best device. The present work provides a new avenue for the rational design of multifunctional iridium-carbazolyl electrophosphors, by synthetically tailoring the carbazolyl pyridine ring that can reveal a superior device performance coupled with good color-tuning versatility, suitable for multicolor-display technology.
New heteroleptic cyclometalated iridium(III) 2‐phenylpyridine‐type complexes with trifluoromethyl substituents and various main‐group moieties were synthesized and their photophysical, electrochemical, and electroluminescent (EL) properties studied. The emission color can be tuned by a facile derivatization of the phenyl moiety of 2‐phenylpyridine with various main‐group moieties, and we have prepared new yellowishgreen to orange triplet emitters with enhanced charge injection/charge transporting features, which can furnish attractive EL performance in phosphorescent organic light‐emitting devices (OLEDs). Attempts were also made to fabricate two‐color white‐light OLEDs based on a combination of fluorescent blue and phosphorescent orange emitters.
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