We have demonstrated that the exemplary red fluorescent organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) gain as much as half of their electroluminescence from annihilation of triplet states generated by recombining charge carriers. The magnitude of triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA) contribution in combination with the remarkably high total efficiencies [>11% external quantum efficiency (EQE)] indicates that the absolute amount of electroluminescence attributable to TTA substantially exceeds the limit imposed by spin statistics, which was independently confirmed by studying magnetic field effects on delayed luminescence. We determined the value of 1.3 for the ratio of the rate constants of singlet and triplet channels of annihilation, which is indeed substantially higher than the value of 0.33 expected for a purely statistical annihilation process. It is, however, in an excellent quantitative agreement with the extent of the experimental contribution of delayed luminescence to steady-state electroluminescence. The nonstatistical branching ratio of the two annihilation channels is attributed to the favorable relationship between the energies of the excited singlet and triplet states of rubrene—emissive layer host. We surmise that, with the appropriate emissive layer materials, the fluorescent OLED devices are capable of using a considerably larger fraction of triplet states than was previously believed. In principle, the upper limit for the singlet excited state yield in the TTA process is 0.5, which makes the maximum internal quantum efficiency of fluorescent OLEDs to be 25%+0.5×75%=62.5%. The estimates of maximum EQE of the fluorescent OLEDs should be revised to at least 0.2×62.5%=12.5% and, likely, even higher to account for optical outcoupling exceeding 0.2.
Abstract— A full‐color AMOLED display with an RGBW color filter pattern has been fabricated. Displays with this format require about one‐half the power of analogous RGB displays. RGBW and RGB 2.16‐in.‐diagonal displays with average power consumptions of 180 and 340 mW, respectively, were characterized for a set of standard digital still camera images at a luminance of 100 cd/m2. In both cases, a white‐emitting AMOLED was used as the light source, and standard LCD filters were used to provide the R, G, and B emission. The color gamuts of these displays were identical and the higher overall efficiency of the RGBW format results from two factors. First, a large fraction of a typical image is near neutral in color and can be reproduced using the white sub‐pixel. Second, the white sub‐pixel in an RGBW AMOLED display is highly efficient because of the absence of any color filter. The efficiency of these displays can be further enhanced by choosing a white emitter optimized to the target display white point (in this case D65). A two‐emission layer configuration based upon separate yellow and blue‐emitting regions is shown to be well suited for both the RGBW and RGB formats.
In this paper, we describe techniques for improving the power consumption and lifetime of full-color AMOLED displays with an RGBW pixel format. A highly efficient and stable white OLED, with color optimized for the display white point (D65) has been developed, which enables low power consumption as well as stable emission. Additionally, a novel approach for improving the lifetime of RGBW displays using subsampled R and B subpixels is discussed.
Abstract— The fabrication of full‐color RGBW OLED displays using a white emitter with RGB color filters has been previously described. This paper discusses the effect of several display‐system factors on the important RGBW OLED display performance attributes of power consumption, lifetime, and perceived image quality. These display‐system factors include the spectrum of the white OLED, the white OLED structure, the color‐filter selection, the subpixel aperture ratios, and the pixel arrangement (including sub‐sampling).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.