Surface Plasmon Enhanced Phosphorescent Organic Light Emitting Diodes
- The Regents Of The University Of California
The objective of the proposed work was to develop the fundamental understanding and practical techniques for enhancement of Phosphorescent Organic Light Emitting Diodes (PhOLEDs) performance by utilizing radiative decay control technology. Briefly, the main technical goal is the acceleration of radiative recombination rate in organometallic triplet emitters by using the interaction with surface plasmon resonances in noble metal nanostructures. Increased photonic output will enable one to eliminate constraints imposed on PhOLED efficiency by triplet-triplet annihilation, triplet-polaron annihilation, and saturation of chromophores with long radiative decay times. Surface plasmon enhanced (SPE) PhOLEDs will operate more efficiently at high injection current densities and will be less prone to degradation mechanisms. Additionally, introduction of metal nanostructures into PhOLEDs may improve their performance due to the improvement of the charge transport through organic layers via multiple possible mechanisms ('electrical bridging' effects, doping-like phenomena, etc.). SPE PhOLED technology is particularly beneficial for solution-fabricated electrophosphorescent devices. Small transition moment of triplet emitters allows achieving a significant enhancement of the emission rate while keeping undesirable quenching processes introduced by the metal nanostructures at a reasonably low level. Plasmonic structures can be introduced easily into solution-fabricated PhOLEDs by blending and spin coating techniques and can be used for enhancement of performance in existing device architectures. This constitutes a significant benefit for a large scale fabrication of PhOLEDs, e.g. by roll-to-roll fabrication techniques. Besides multieexciton annihilation, the power efficacy of PhOLEDs is often limited by high operational bias voltages required for overcoming built-in potential barriers to injection and transport of electrical charges through a device. This problem is especially pronounced in solution processed OLEDs lacking the accuracy and precision of fabrication found in their small molecule counterparts. From this point of view, it seems beneficial to develop materials allowing reduction of the operation bias voltage via improvement of the charge injection. The materials sought have to be compatible with solution-based fabrication process and allow easy incorporation of metal nanostructures.
- Research Organization:
- The Regents Of The University Of California
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE
- DOE Contract Number:
- FC26-04NT42277
- OSTI ID:
- 1001222
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Fast Organic Vapor Phase Deposition of Thin Films in Light-Emitting Diodes
Enhancement of efficiencies for tandem green phosphorescent organic light-emitting devices with a p-type charge generation layer
A New Class of Non-Conjugated Bipolar Hybrid Hosts for Phosphorescent Organic Light-Emitting Diodes
Journal Article
·
Sun Oct 04 20:00:00 EDT 2020
· ACS Nano
·
OSTI ID:1670700
Enhancement of efficiencies for tandem green phosphorescent organic light-emitting devices with a p-type charge generation layer
Journal Article
·
Wed Oct 15 00:00:00 EDT 2014
· Materials Research Bulletin
·
OSTI ID:22420584
A New Class of Non-Conjugated Bipolar Hybrid Hosts for Phosphorescent Organic Light-Emitting Diodes
Journal Article
·
Thu Oct 01 00:00:00 EDT 2009
· Journal of Materials CHemistry
·
OSTI ID:968019
Related Subjects
72 PHYSICS OF ELEMENTARY PARTICLES AND FIELDS
73 NUCLEAR PHYSICS AND RADIATION PHYSICS
77 NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY
ACCELERATION
ACCURACY
ANNIHILATION
CHARGE TRANSPORT
COATINGS
EFFICIENCY
FABRICATION
LIGHT EMITTING DIODES
NANOSTRUCTURES
PERFORMANCE
PLASMONS
POTENTIALS
QUENCHING
RADIATIVE DECAY
RECOMBINATION
SATURATION
SOLAR PROTONS
SPIN
TRANSPORT
TRIPLETS
73 NUCLEAR PHYSICS AND RADIATION PHYSICS
77 NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY
ACCELERATION
ACCURACY
ANNIHILATION
CHARGE TRANSPORT
COATINGS
EFFICIENCY
FABRICATION
LIGHT EMITTING DIODES
NANOSTRUCTURES
PERFORMANCE
PLASMONS
POTENTIALS
QUENCHING
RADIATIVE DECAY
RECOMBINATION
SATURATION
SOLAR PROTONS
SPIN
TRANSPORT
TRIPLETS