Publication | Open Access
UV-ozone-treated ultra-thin NaF film as anode buffer layer on organic light emitting devices
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Citations
19
References
2010
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsVacuum DeviceChemical EngineeringOptical PropertiesNanoelectronicsOrganic LightThermally Activated Delayed FluorescenceThin Film ProcessingHealth SciencesMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringPhotochemistryOrganic SemiconductorNew Lighting TechnologyOzoneNaf FilmUltra-thin Naf FilmWhite OledApplied PhysicsSurface PolarityOptoelectronicsChemical Vapor Deposition
An ultra-thin NaF film was thermally deposited between ITO and NPB as the buffer layer and then treated with the ultraviolet (UV) ozone, in the fabrication of organic light emitting diodes (ITO/NaF/NPB/Alq(3)/LiF/Al) to study its effect on hole-injection properties. The treatment drastically transforms the role of NaF film from hole-blocking to hole-injecting. This transformation is elucidated using hole-only devices, energy band measurement, surface energy, surface polarity, and X-ray photoelectron spectra. With the optimal thickness (3 nm) of the UV-ozone-treated NaF layer, the device performance is significantly improved, with a turn-on voltage, maximum luminance, and maximum current efficiency of 2.5 V, 15700 cd/m(2), and 4.9 cd/A, respectively. Results show that NaF film is not only a hole-blocking layer, but also a promising hole-injecting layer after UV-ozone treatment.
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