Efficient yellow and red thermally activated delayed fluorescence materials based on a quinoxaline-derived electron-acceptor†
Abstract
Thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) molecules, which can realize 100% internal quantum efficiency without using noble metals, have emerged as the third-generation organic light emitting-diode (OLED) emitters. However, high-efficiency red TADF materials are still rare because of their restricted molecular design based on the energy-gap law. Herein, two new TADF emitters, 2,3-bis (dimethylacridin phenyl) quinoxaline-4,4′-dicyanobenzene (DMAC-QCN) and 2,3-bis (phenoxazine phenyl) quinoxaline-4,4′-dicyanobenzene (PXZ-QCN) are designed and synthesized. Both investigated compounds exhibit significant TADF characteristics with small energy gap (ΔEST) between the lowest excited singlet and triplet states, short delayed fluorescence lifetimes, excellent thermal stability and high photoluminescence quantum yields. The vacuum-deposited OLEDs utilizing DMAC-QCN and PXZ-QCN as emitters display yellow and red electroluminescence with emission peaks at 545 and 604 nm, and maximum external quantum efficiencies (EQEs) of 17.3% and 15.6%, respectively. Notably, the PXZ-QCN-based device shows a small efficiency roll-off of 14.1% (EQE = 13.4%) even at a practical high luminance of 1000 cd m−2.