Publication | Closed Access
Carbazole–benzimidazole hybrid bipolar host materials for highly efficient green and blue phosphorescent OLEDs
96
Citations
46
References
2011
Year
EngineeringOrganic ElectronicsBlue Phosphorescent OledsGreen ChemistryExcitation Energy TransferOrganic ChemistryChemistryChemical EngineeringHybrid MaterialsBipolar HostsPolymer ChemistryLower Triplet EnergyMaterials ScienceOrganic SemiconductorHost-guest ChemistryWhite OledElectronic MaterialsTriplet ExcitonsMolecule-based MaterialFunctional MaterialsOrganic-inorganic Hybrid Material
In this study, we synthesized a series of bipolar hosts (CbzCBI, mCPCBI, CbzNBI, and mCPNBI) containing hole-transporting carbazole and electron-transporting benzimidazole moieties and then examined the morphological, thermal, and photophysical properties and carrier mobilities of these bipolar host materials. Altering the linking topology (C- or N-connectivity of the benzimidazole) changed the effective conjugation length and led to different excited-state solvent relaxation behavior. The N-connected compounds (CbzNBI, mCPNBI) possessed higher triplet energies (ET) than those of their C-connected analogues (CbzCBI, mCPCBI) by 0.23 eV. The higher values of ET of CbzNBI and mCPNBI endowed them with the ability to confine triplet excitons on the blue-emitting guest. A blue PhOLED device incorporating mCPNBI achieved a maximum external quantum efficiency, current efficiency, and power efficiency of 16.3%, 35.7 cd A−1, and 23.3 lm W−1, respectively; confirming the suitability of using N-connected bipolar hosts for the blue phosphor. The donor/acceptor interactions of the C-connected analogue resulted in a lower triplet energy, making it a suitable bipolar host for green phosphors. A green-phosphorescent device incorporating CbzCBI as the host doped with (PBi)2Ir(acac) achieved a maximum external quantum efficiency, current efficiency, and power efficiency of 20.1%, 70.4 cd A−1, and 63.2 lm W−1, respectively.
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