INTRODUCTION
Since the efficient small molecule organic light-emitting diode (OLED) was reported by Tang and VanSlyke in 19871 enormous interests have been shown in developing the emitting materials to realize high-resolution full-color flat panel displays with long lifetime. However, the performances of blue emitting materials are still not sufficient for their applications. There are few reports of OLEDs with deep blue color, high efficiency, and long operational lifetime.2-5
Among red, green and blue of the three principal colors necessary for display applications, blue-emitting materials and devices are particularly in need of improvement in terms of efficiency and color purity than those of the green and red emitters. In recent years, developing deep blue electroluminescence (EL) color with a CIEy coordinate value of 0.15 has been considered essential6 as such emitters can effectively reduce the power consumption of a full-color OLED panel and can also be utilized to generate emission of other colors by energy transfer to a matching emissive dopant.7,8
While high-efficiency green and red emitting colors could be obtained readily by doping in the commonly used guest materials such as tris(8-ydroxyquinolinato) aluminum(Alq3). A wider band gap host is essential for the efficient generation of blue gap host to obtain efficient emission of blue dopant. Therefore, key for developing deep blue OLEDs is not only finding the highly fluorescent deep blue dopant but also appropriately matching host material in order to enhance the probability of carrier recombination as well as the efficiency of Förster energy transfer from the host to the dopant molecule. There were a number of reports on the design and synthesis of dopants that can produce deep blue photoluminescence.9 However, because of the considerably blue shifted absorption of these deep blue dopants, better matching host materials with sufficient spectral overlap for reasonable high Förster energy transfer are needed to facilitate the generation of blue dopant emission with high efficiency as well as deep blue color.10
Blue emission is undoubtedly the basic element to achieve perfect white emission. Therefore, there have been many efforts toward exploring blue-emitting materials and improving color purity as well as efficiency of blue OLEDs.11-13 despite the fact that great progress has been achieved, many efforts are still required to further improve the performance of blue OLEDs, especially the efficiency, to meet the demands of display application.
In this work, we demonstrated high efficient blue OLEDs using a blue organic materials, 4,4′-bis(9-ethyl-3-carbazovinylene)-1,1′-biphenyl (BCzVBi) doped in 4,4′-bis(2,2′-diphenylyinyl)-1,1′-biphenyl (DPVBi) as a blue emissive layer and its energy transfer.
EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
ITO coated glass was cleaned in ultrasonic bath by regular sequence: in acetone, methanol, diluted water and isopropyl alcohol. Hereafter, pre-cleaned ITO was treated by O2 plasma under condition of 2 × 10-2 Torr, 125 W during 2 minites.14 blue OLEDs were fabricated using the high vacuum (1.0 × 10-6 Torr) thermal evaporation and NPB, DPVBi, Alq3 and BCzVBi and Liq and Al were deposited by evaporation rate of 1.0, 0.1, 0.1, 5.0 Å/s, respectively.
Fig. 1(a) Schematic device configuration. (b) Molecular structures.
Fig. 1(a) shows the schematic configuration of the blue OLEDs construction in this study, and Fig. 1(b) does the molecular structures of the chromophores in the devices as emitting layer materials. The host-guest multilayered blue OLED device structures using blue fluorescence dopant BCzVBi with fluorescence host DPVBi were as follows: ITO/N,N′-bis-(1-naphyl)-N,N′-diphenyl-1,1′-biphenyl-4,4′-diamine (NPB) as a hole transport layer / 4,4′-bis(9-ethyl-3-carbazovinylene)-1,1′-biphenyl (BCzVBi) doped in 4,4′-bis (2,2′-diphenylyinyl)-1,1′-biphenyl (DPVBi) as a blue emissive layer / 8-hydroxyquinolino!aluminum (Alq3) as an electron transport layer / lithium quinolate (Liq) as an electron injection layer / aluminum (Al) as a cathode. Three kinds of the devices were fabricated using doped BCzVBi 3%, 6%, and, non-doped BCzVBi to DPVBi in blue OLED devices. With various DC voltage bias, the optical and electrical properties of blue OLEDs such as the current density, luminance, luminous efficiency, Commission Internationale de L’eclairage (CIExy) coordinates and electroluminescence characteristics were measured with Keithley 236, CHROMA METER CS-100A and JBS OLED analysis system IVL-200.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Current density of blue OLEDs with driving voltage was as shown in Fig. 2. Device A, B, and C was constructed NPB (500 Å) / DPVBi:BCzVBi-x% (150 Å) / Alq3 (300 Å) / Liq (20 Å) as varying BCzVBi concentration with non-doped, 3%, and 6%, respectively. As shown Fig. 2, Current density characteristics of blue device A, B, and C was 375, 384, and 414 mA/cm2 at 12 V each. Device C doping BCzVBi 6% into DPVBi had higher current density than Device A and device B. HOMO levels of NPB and DPVBi in device A were 5.0 and 5.9 eV. DPVBi blocked holes due to its high HOMO levels, therefore, blue OLED device using pure DPVBi showd low current density. In Fig. 3, BCzVBi in doped blue device acts as a hole carrier and mitigates the hole blocking effect by DPVBi because of its 0.4 eV higher HOMO energy level than DPVBi. Thus, as increasing BCzVBi concentration increase into DPVBi generates increase of current density in blue OLED device.
Fig. 2Current density of blue OLED devices. (a) BCzVBi-non doped (b) BCzVBi-3% doped (c) BCzVBi-6% doped.
Fig. 3Energy diagrams of BCzVBi doped blue OLED devices.
Fig. 4Optical characteristics of blue OLED devices (a) Luminance (b) Luminous efficiency.
In Fig. 3, BCzVBi doped device was blocked electrons transported from Alq3 because BCzVBi’s LUMO levels are lower than that of DPVBi. Electron trapping effect due to BCzVBi’s LUMO levels and hole carrying effect according to BCzVBi’s HOMO levels resulted in increase of BCzVBi concentration and high luminous efficiency eventually in the blue emitting layer.
Luminance and luminous efficiency of blue OLED devices were shown in Fig. 4. Luminances of device A, B, and C were 7270, 8990, and 10600 cd/m2 at 12 V, respectively. Maximum luminance of device C using BCzVBi 6% was 13200 cd/m2, at 13.8 V. Luminance is also increased by BCzVBi concentration increase with DPVBi due to Förster energy transfer from LUMO of DPVBi to LUMO of BCzVBi. Luminous efficiency of blue OLED device A, B, and C was 3.41, 3.87, and, 4.24 cd/A, at 3.9 V, respectively. Device C using doped BCzVBi 6% was compared with non-doped device A and it has two times higher efficiency than device A.
Table 1CIE(x,y) coordinates of blue OLED devices with different bias voltages
Fig. 5Electroluminescence spectra of BCzVBi 6 % doped and bare DPVBi device
Table 1 shows CIE(x,y) coordinates of blue OLED devices with various voltages. BCzVBi doped and non-doped blue OLED devices were independent on bias voltage with different concentration of BCzVBi. It also shows that blue OLED devices with doped BCzVBi were significantly improved luminous efficiency by blue fluorescent dopant without change of CIE(x,y) coordinates.
Electroluminescence spectra of blue OLED device A and C were shown in Fig. 5. The blue EL spectra of device A using bare DPVBi had the highest intensity at 456 nm but BCzVBi 6% doped device C was two major peaks, at 445 and 470 nm. These two peaks in the blue emission region suggest the presence of exciplex through energy transfer between LUMO and HOMO levels of DPVBi and BCzVBi, which is considered as endothermic Förster energy transfer from DPVBi to BCzVBi by molecule's vibration. Considering energy level of HOMO/LUMO of DPVBi and BCzVBi, holes injected from NPB layer would stay more favorably on HOMO of BCzVBi than DPVBi while electrons injected from Alq3 would be accumulated on LUMO of DPVBi than BCzVBi. Then electrons transition is happened from LUMO of DPVBi to that of BCzVBi via endothermic Förster energy transfer followed by recombination between holes on HOMO of BCzVBi and electrons on LUMO of BCzVBi to achieve blue emission, which results in only appearing two peaks from BCzVBi in electroluminescence spectrum.
CONCLUSION
In summary, we fabricated highly efficient blue OLED devices using doped BCzVBi into DPVBi with different dopant concentrations. Blue fluorescence dopant BCzVBi enhances the current density, luminance and luminous efficiency of blue OLED devices as improving carrier injection into the emitting layer according to forming complex at BCzVBi’s HOMO and LUMO level with DPVBi. The luminous efficiency of BCzVBi doped OLED is 4.24 cd/A and it has two times higher than pure DPVBi blue OLED device with no change of CIEx,y coordinates. However electroluminescence spectrum of BCzVBi-6% doped blue OLED has two major peaks at 445 nm and 470 nm whereas DPVBi does 456 nm peak only because of endothermic and endothermic Föster energy transfer from DPVBi to BCzVBi by molecule's vibration.
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