Backbone Modulation of Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence Polymers for Efficient Orange-Red Emission in Solution-Processed OLEDs
Abstract
Thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) enables near-unity internal quantum efficiency by harvesting triplet excitons via reverse intersystem crossing, but designing orange-red TADF polymers with high radiative rates and suppressed non-radiative loss remains challenging. Herein, design of orange-red TADF polymers via backbone engineering that tunes excited-state energies and energy-transfer pathways is reported. Carbazole and dibenzofuran (DBF) units are incorporated into the polymer backbones with varied loadings of a naphthalimide-dimethylacridine unit. Altering DBF linkage (3,7-vs.2,8-) modulates polymer photophysical properties, enhancing energy transfer and exciton migration while reducing nonradiative decay. The polymer pNAI-DBF3705 exhibits a photoluminescence quantum yield of 78% and an accelerated reverse intersystem crossing rate of 8.76 × 10 5 s -1 . Solution-processed OLEDs based on pNAI-DBF3705 deliver a maximum external quantum efficiency of 10% and improved operational stability under high driving voltages. These results highlight backbone engineering as an effective handle to optimize excited-state dynamics in TADF polymers for high-performance, solutionprocessable orange-red OLEDs.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Journal of Materials Chemistry C HOT Papers and Perspective on the technologies of OLEDs