Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Blue organic light-emitting diode with a turn-on voltage of 1.47 V

  • Seiichiro Izawa,
  • Masahiro Morimoto,
  • Keisuke Fujimoto,
  • Koki Banno,
  • Yutaka Majima,
  • Masaki Takahashi,
  • Shigeki Naka,
  • Masahiro Hiramoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41208-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Among the three primary colors, blue emission in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are highly important but very difficult to develop. OLEDs have already been commercialized; however, blue OLEDs have the problem of requiring a high applied voltage due to the high-energy of blue emission. Herein, an ultralow voltage turn-on at 1.47 V for blue emission with a peak wavelength at 462 nm (2.68 eV) is demonstrated in an OLED device with a typical blue-fluorescent emitter that is widely utilized in a commercial display. This OLED reaches 100 cd/m2, which is equivalent to the luminance of a typical commercial display, at 1.97 V. Blue emission from the OLED is achieved by the selective excitation of the low-energy triplet states at a low applied voltage by using the charge transfer (CT) state as a precursor and triplet-triplet annihilation, which forms one emissive singlet from two triplet excitons.