Meng-Ju
Tsai
a,
Wei-Lun
Huang
b,
Li-Ming
Chen
a,
Guo-Lun
Ruan
b,
Dian
Luo
c,
Zong-Liang
Tseng
*b and
Ken-Tsung
Wong
*ad
aDepartment of Chemistry, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan. E-mail: kenwong@ntu.edu.tw
bDepartment of Electronic Engineering, Ming Chi University of Technology, New Taipei City 243303, Taiwan. E-mail: zltseng@mail.mcut.edu.tw
cCollege of Photonics, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Tainan, 71150, Taiwan
dInstitute of Atomic and Molecular Science, Academia Sinica, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan
First published on 13th December 2022
A new dicarbazole-based donor, BCz3Ph, for exciplex formation was synthesized and characterized. The new green (PL λmax = 527 nm) exciplex BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) blend with a photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) of 43% and thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) character was utilized as the emitting layer (EML) of solution-processed OLED devices. To facilitate hole injection into the EML, a new cross-linkable monomer, BCzC4Sy, adopting a dicarbazole core linked to a styrene group by a butyl chain was designed to realize a solvent resistant hole-transporting layer (HTL) after thermal polymerization. The flexible butyl (C4) bridge accounts for a lower polymerization temperature as compared to that of the methyl (C1)-bridged counterpart, BCzC1Sy, resulting in the formation of amorphous films with better solvent resistance as well as smoother morphology. The choice of dicarbazole as the HTL core not only suppresses the HTL-to-EML energy barrier, but also prevents the emission color variation stemming from the possible exciplex emission at the HTL/EML interface. The best OLED device with EQEmax = 9.2%, CEmax = 27.94 cd A−1 and PEmax = 28.7 lm W−1 was obtained with a thermally polymerized BCzC4Sy film as the HTL. The device achieved a maximum luminance up to 22000 cd m−2 together with a very low efficiency roll-off, retaining 97% efficiency at 1000 cd m−2 (EQE1000cd = 8.9%). More significantly, a 2 × 2 cm2 device fabricated by slot-die coating gave good color homogeneity and rather high brightness and promising efficiency (EQE 5.0%), manifesting the potential of employing a thermally cross-linkable HTM and exciplex-based EML to produce high efficiency solution-processed OLEDs.
In this work, a new electron donor BCz3Ph was synthesized and characterized to intermix with a benchmark triazine-based acceptor PO-T2T37 to form a new exciplex-forming system, which gave a green emission with a decent photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) of 43%. For creating a smooth hole injection and transport, dicarbazole was chosen as the core to be further functionalized with a styrene group to afford a new thermally cross-linkable HTM. The choice of dicarbazole as the core of the HTL suppresses the energy barrier between the HTL and EML issue and is also beneficial for preventing the emission color pollution from the exciplex formation at the HTL/EML interface. In a previous study, Lee and coworkers reported a cross-linkable dicarbazole-centered HTM BCzMs (BCzC1Sy) (Scheme 1),38 which served as a suitable HTM for solution-processed phosphorescent devices due to its hole-transporting and anti-solvent erosion properties. In this work, the length of the alkyl chain between the dicarbazole core and styrene is increased to afford a new thermally cross-linkable molecule BCzC4Sy. The effects of the carbon chain lengths of the hole-transporting materials were found to strongly influence the temperature required for thermal polymerization, in which BCzC4Sy exhibits apparent thermal polymerization behavior at a temperature of 146 °C, which is lower than that of 192 °C of BCzC1Sy. More importantly, the BCzC4Sy film after thermal treatment exhibits excellent solvent erosion resistance. The OLED devices employing thermally cross-linked BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy films as the HTL and the solution-processed BCz3Ph:PO-T2T blend as the EML gave EQEmax of 7.2% and 9.2%, respectively, while maintaining a high efficiency of 7.1% and 8.9% at 1000 cd m−2. This work highlights the design of a new thermally cross-linkable HTL with the same core chromophore of the donor for exciplex formation. The new molecular monomer BCzC4Sy with a more flexible alkyl linkage can thermally polymerize to give a solvent-resistive film with superior properties compared to the BCzC1Sy counterpart, affording better performing solution-processed exciplex-based OLED devices with lower efficiency roll-off.
The photophysical behaviors of BCz3Ph and BCzC4Sy as compared to those of the model counterpart BCzC1Sy were investigated by measuring the UV-vis absorption and photoluminescence (PL) spectra, as depicted in Fig. 1a, and the data are summarized in Table 1. In diluted toluene solution at room temperature, similar π–π* transition absorption peaks were observed for the absorption spectra of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy, with a maximum absorption peak (λmax) centered around 303 nm together with weak absorptions around 330–360 nm corresponding to n–π* transition. It is noted that BCz3Ph equipped with an N-biphenyl substituent exhibits similar λmax to those of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy, but less distinguished n–π* absorption. All three materials show similar emission spectra in toluene solution, and the PL maxima (PL λmax) are centered around 407–414 nm, and are assigned to the dicarbazole core. The phosphorescence spectrum of BCz3Ph in MeTHF was then acquired at 77 K, as depicted in Fig. 1b. The T1 energy level (ET) can then be estimated to be 2.90 eV from the onset of the phosphorescence spectrum. As a reference, the triplet energy level of BCzC1Sy was calculated to be 2.87 eV by density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TD-DFT) under the B3LYP/6-31G level.40 However, attempts to measure the phosphorescence spectra of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy were not successful due to the appearance of styrene groups, which are an efficient triplet quencher.41a–c The transient photoluminescent (TRPL) spectra of BCz3Ph and BCzC4Sy shown in Fig. S1 (ESI†) exhibit a much longer lifetime of BCz3Ph as compared to that of BCzC4Sy, indicating the phosphorescence quenching process in the styrene-appended structure. Furthermore, the absorption and emission of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy before and after cross-linking were examined as the results shown in Fig. S2 (ESI†). The absorptions remain intact, but the broadening of the emissions was observed after cross-linking, which might have arisen from the aggregation of the chromophore.
Molecule | λ abs sol.a (nm) | λ PL sol. a (nm) | Optical Egb (eV) | E T (eV) | HOMO (eV) | LUMOe (eV) | T d (°C) | T cl (°C)g |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Measured in toluene at the concentration about 10−5 M. b Optical Eg is calculated from the onset of absorption. c Estimated from the onset of the Phos spectra at 77 K in MeTHF. d Calculated from potential vs. ferrocene/ferrocenium redox couple. e Calculated as the difference between the HOMO and the corresponding optical bandgap. f Reported value (ref. 38). g T cl is the peak temperature of cross-linking, determined by DSC. | ||||||||
BCz3Ph | 305 | 406 | 3.34 | 2.90 | −5.22d | −1.88 | 454 | — |
BCzC1Sy | 303 | 409 | 3.40 | — | −5.22d | −1.82 | 430f | 192 |
BCzC4Sy | 303 | 414 | 3.40 | — | −5.18d | −1.78 | 453 | 146 |
Cyclic voltammetry (CV) was then implemented to investigate the electrochemical properties of these materials. The oxidation potential was measured and recorded with reference to the ferrocene/ferrocenium (Fc/Fc+) redox couple, as shown in Fig. 1c. A reversible oxidation potential at 0.34, 0.31 and 0.22 V was observed for BCz3Ph, BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy, respectively. Apparently, BCz3Ph exhibits a higher oxidation potential as compared to those of alkylated counterparts BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy due to the inductive effect of the biphenyl substituents. Also, it is noted that BCzC1Sy exhibits a slightly higher oxidation potential as compared to that of BCzC4Sy due to the shorter distance of styrene. This result indicates that the length of the alkyl chain has a slight effect on the oxidation behavior. With reference to the Fc/Fc+ redox couple, the HOMO energy levels are estimated as 5.22 eV (BCz3Ph), 5.22 eV (BCzC1Sy), and 5.18 eV (BCzC4Sy). The energy levels of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy demonstrate that these molecules are suitable for serving as HTMs of OLED devices that employ the exciplex-forming system with BCz3Ph as the donor.
According to previous reports, BCzPh has been reported as a superior donor material for exciplex-forming systems when paired with triazine-centered acceptors.39 Herein, the new donor BCz3Ph with an additional phenyl group on the N-substituted peripherals can further enhance the morphological stability. A glass transition temperature (Tg = 140 °C) was identified by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) as compared to that (60 °C) of BCzPh.40 In addition, BCz3Ph possesses comparable molecular weight with the triazine-based acceptors for better compatibility for film formation upon solution processes. To examine the possibility of forming a suitable exciplex blend, the donor BCz3Ph was mixed with a benchmark acceptor PO-T2T. The films were prepared by spin-coating 1.6 wt% solutions of BCz3Ph, PO-T2T and a BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) mixture in chlorobenzene to give a thickness of the film of about 30 nm. As shown in Fig. 1d, the absorption spectrum of the BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) blend film can be deemed a linear combination of the individual donor and acceptor absorptions, indicating that no apparent ground state electronic interactions are present. On the other hand, compared with the emissions of BCz3Ph and PO-T2T, the emission of the BCz3Ph:PO-T2T blend shows a distinctly red-shifted peak centered at 527 nm, which is a signature of exciplex formation in the blend. More importantly, the solution-processed BCz3Ph:PO-T2T blend film exhibits a PLQY of 43%, indicating the efficient intermolecular charge transfer between BCz3Ph and PO-T2T. The phosphorescence spectrum of the exciplex-forming BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) blend is shown in Fig. S3 (ESI†). The overlapping peaks of the PL and Phos spectra indicate that the singlet state and triplet state of the exciplex are almost degenerate in energy, demonstrating the potential of efficient RISC. To verify the TADF character of the emission from the BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) blend film, temperature-dependent (77–300 K) transient photoluminescence (TRPL) spectra were measured. As indicated in Fig. S4 (ESI†), the relaxation profiles of the BCz3Ph:PO-T2T (2:1) film emissions at different temperatures can be fitted with two-component exponential decays. The fitting data at 300 K are summarized in Table 2, while the data of different temperatures are summarized in Table S1 (ESI†). As indicated, the delayed fluorescence ratio of the exciplex-forming blend enhances along with the increase of the temperature, whereas the prompt fluorescence ratio slightly decreases as the temperature increases to 300 K. The two-component relaxation as well as the enhanced RISC rates at higher temperatures give rise to an increase in the delayed fluorescence ratio, which is a typical signature of materials with TADF character.
D:A ratio | PLQYa (%) | λ PL/onset (nm) | TRPLb | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A 1 | τ p (ns) | A 2 | τ d (μs) | |||
a Measured with an integrating sphere (Hamamatsu C9920-02). b Measured under an ambient atmosphere (300 K), and the decay components were fitted with two exponential decay models as I(t) = A1exp(−t/τp) + A2exp(−t/τd), as shown in Fig. S4 (ESI). | ||||||
2:1 | 43 | 533/455 | 0.02 | 58 | 0.98 | 2.59 |
The thermal stability of the carbazole-based materials was investigated with thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) under nitrogen. The TGA analysis indicates that BCz3Ph exhibits a higher decomposition temperature (Td = 454 °C, corresponding to 5 wt% loss) as compared to that (430 °C) of BCzPh.40BCzC4Sy exhibits good thermal stability with a Td of 453 °C, which is higher than that (430 °C)38 of BCzC1Sy, mainly attributed to its larger molecular weight. In addition, the feasible preparation of the D:A blended film reveals its suitability to serve as the EML of a solution-processed OLED device. For smooth hole injection to the EML, a solvent-resistant HTL is highly desired. To probe the thermal cross-linking temperatures of BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy, the materials were investigated by DSC at a heating rate of 10 °C min−1, and the results are shown in Fig. 2a. The cross-linkable materials BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy showed significant exothermic peaks at 192 °C and 142 °C, respectively, indicating that the cross-linking reactions occurred around these temperatures. The DSC profiles show a large difference between these two molecules. The exothermic peak of BCzC1Sy is about 50 °C higher as compared to that of BCzC4Sy. Apparently, the longer butyl (C4) chain of BCzC4Sy increases the flexibility and reactivity of the cross-linking styrene group, in turn facilitating the cross-linking reaction at a lower temperature.
In order to confirm the solvent resistance of these two thermally cross-linkable materials, an experiment was conducted to examine the solvent erosion effects via monitoring the difference in the absorption intensity of the thermally cross-linked films before and after the solvent treatment. Initially, the absorption intensities of the BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy films that have been thermally treated at 100 and 170 °C for thermal cross-linking and subsequently treated with chlorobenzene that was dripped onto the films and dried by spin-coating were measured. For comparison, the non-cross linkable BCz3Ph was also used as a model compound for examining the solvent resistance. As the spectra indicated in Fig. 2b, chlorobenzene erodes most of the BCz3Ph molecules, causing the intensity of its absorption to be significantly reduced. In contrast, the BCzC1Sy films have improved solvent resistance after thermal treatment at 100 and 170 °C as compared to that of the BCz3Ph film (Fig. 2c), despite displaying little temperature dependence. With the aid of the flexible C4 alkyl chain, the BCzC4Sy film after thermal cross-linking at 170 °C has a significant degree of resistance to solvent erosion as the absorption remains nearly unchanged under solvent washing (Fig. 2d). This result indicates that BCzC4Sy has perfect solvent erosion resistant after thermal cross-linking and can serve as a good HTL for solution-processed OLED devices. Furthermore, BCzC4Sy can be washed away prior to thermal cross-linking, which means that it has a great operating window and is thus more versatile in the fabrication of OLED devices.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was further used to examine the integrity of the film morphology and provide insight towards the better solvent resistance of BCzC4Sy. Here, the films were measured before and after thermal cross-linking, along with rinsing with chlorobenzene, respectively. The results are shown in Fig. 3. The root mean square (RMS) value (0.68 nm) of BCzC1Sy shows that the film is quite smooth at the beginning, but it then slightly increases to 0.80 nm after thermal cross-linking. After rinsing with chlorobenzene, the RMS value was further deteriorated to 1.39 nm, which means that the film coating by the polymerized BCzC1Sy can’t resist solvent erosion very well. On the other hand, the RMS value (0.83 nm) of BCzC4Sy is larger than that of BCzC1Sy before thermal cross-linking, indicating that the surfaces of the films were relatively rough. By thermal cross-linking of BCzC4Sy, the RMS value was found to reduce to 0.56 nm. After further rinsing with chlorobenzene, the RMS value can still be maintained at 0.52 nm, demonstrating that the polymerized BCzC4Sy can indeed effectively resist solvent erosion after thermal cross-linking, and the surface morphology of the films can still be retained after solvent rinsing.
Fig. 4 (a) Schematic OLED structure, and (b) energy levels of the HTLs, donor, acceptor and ETL used in this study. |
First, the thermally cross-linked (170 °C) BCzC1Sy film was utilized for screening the suitable D:A ratio for giving the best EML. After examining the device characteristics (Fig. S5 and Table S2, ESI†), BCz3Ph:PO-T2T = 2:1 (PLQY = 43%) was selected as the EML owing to its pure exciplex emission. Therefore, four devices (the combination of two HTLs and two curing temperatures) were fabricated. All devices show green EL emission with wavelength peaks between 531 and 535 nm and the CIE coordinate of approximately (0.36, 0.55). The device characteristics are summarized in Table 3. Fig. 5a shows the current density–voltage–luminance (J–V–L) characteristics of the devices. The D1 and D2 devices employing BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy films annealed at 100 °C as the HTLs exhibit the same Von of 3.3 V, whereas the Von of the D3 and D4 devices employing the BCzC1Sy and BCzC4Sy films annealed at 170 °C as the HTLs are 2.7 and 2.5 V, respectively. The Von is drastically reduced when the annealing temperature is raised to 170 °C, which is attributed to the more sufficient cross-linking polymerization at a higher temperature, resulting in a smoother film morphology for better hole injection and transport. As indicated in Fig. 5b–d, the devices utilizing these cross-linkable materials as HTLs demonstrate decent EQEs of over 5%. More importantly, after thermal cross-linking at 170 °C, the EQEs of the devices are significantly increased to 7.2% and 9.2% for devices D3 and D4, respectively. It is noteworthy that the EQEs of the D3 and D4 devices remain at 7.1% and 8.9% at 1000 cd m−2, respectively, indicating the reduced efficiency roll-off and device stability. Furthermore, the D4 device exhibited the lowest Von and excellent efficiencies of 9.2% (EQE), 27.94 cd A−1 (CE) and 28.7 lm W−1 (PE), which is the best performance among the reported solution-processed exciplex-based OLEDs. Generally, ηEQE = ηout × β × γ × ΦPL,43 where β is the exciton generation factor induced from photons, γ is the carrier balance factor of the ratio between holes and electrons, and ΦPL is the PLQY. Given that the PLQY of the exciplex is 43%, ηout is assumed to be 20%, and the theoretical EQE can be deduced to be 9.8%, which is very close to that of the D4 device. This indicates that the D4 device based on thermally cross-linked BCzC4Sy film is well optimized to extract the maximum efficiency of the EML. The film integrity of the BCzC4Sy film achieved by the thermal cross-linking process is speculated to lead to the high EQE of the device. It has been reported that the cross-linked molecules would achieve the most thermodynamically stable molecular arrangement through slight writhing after film formation.44 Due to the longer side chain of BCzC4Sy, it is endowed with the highest degree of freedom to attain the most stable and complete polymer film, leading to superior solvent resistance and better hole-transporting capability under the same thermal curing conditions. This is the reason why the D4 device achieves the highest EQE, CE, PE and lower Von.
Device | HTL | Annealing Temp. (°C) | EL λmax (nm) | V on (V) | EQEmax/CEmax/PEmax (%/cd A−1/lm W−1) | At 1000 cd m−2 (%/cd A−1/lm W−1) b | L max (cd m−2) | CIE (x, y) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Turn-on voltage at which emission became detectable. b The values of EQE, CE, PE and driving voltages of the device at 1000 cd m−2. | |||||||||
D1 | BCzC1Sy | 100 | 531 | 3.3 | 5.53/17.24/11.22 | 5.46/16.75/11.21 | 22904 | (0.36, 0.55) | |
D2 | BCzC4Sy | 100 | 533 | 3.3 | 6.25/19.33/13.18 | 6.21/19.14/13.07 | 22222 | (0.36, 0.55) | |
D3 | BCzC1Sy | 170 | 531 | 2.7 | 7.15/21.82/18.68 | 7.07/21.26/15.90 | 23287 | (0.37, 0.55) | |
D4 | BCzC4Sy | 170 | 531 | 2.5 | 9.21/27.94/28.7 | 8.89/26.87/21.65 | 22137 | (0.37, 0.55) |
To avoid HTLs forming an exciplex with PO-T2T for giving different emission color at the HTL/EML interface, dicarbazole was selected as the core of the HTM and the donor of the exciplex. In order to verify this idea, bilayer-type films were made with the PO-T2T coating on top of the bare BCzC4Sy film or thermally cross-linked BCzC4Sy film. The photoluminescence spectra of these bilayer films are shown in Fig. S6 (ESI†) as compared to that of the film fabricated with the exciplex-forming blend BCz3Ph:PO-T2T. Despite its weaker emission intensity, BCzC4Sy can indeed form the same exciplex emission as BCz3Ph with PO-T2T, confirming that the common dicarbazole core of BCz3Ph and BCzC4Sy is crucial to circumvent the pollution of the desired exciplex emission from unwanted interfacial interactions.
In addition, it is of great significance to demonstrate a large-area device fabricated under ambient environments, as it is beneficial to practical mass production and potential lighting applications. Slot-die coating is considered to be a well-suited means of achieving extremely uniform large area films among various solution-process technologies, due to the simple relationship between the flow rate of the solution, wet-film coating thickness, and speed of the coated substrate relative to the head. Besides, slot-die coating can be easily integrated into scaled-up processes, including sheet-to-sheet deposition and roll-to-roll coating systems. While the desired thickness of the film is on the scale of nanometers, the thickness of the as-coated wet film is on the scale of micrometers,45 containing mass solvent residues. It is thus crucial that the under layer, in this case the HTM, presents superior solvent resistance. Herein, a large-area 2 × 2 cm2 device (device D5) adopting the device structure of D4 with the thermally cross-linked BCzC4Sy film as the HTL was prepared in ambient atmosphere employing the slot-die coating technique, as shown in Fig. 5f. The flow rates and concentrations of solution, and the speeds of the coated head for each layer are listed in Table S3 (ESI†). The results of device D5 are shown in Fig. S7 and Table S4 (ESI†). The EQEs and Lmax remain at 5.0% and 20686 cd m−2, respectively, which demonstrates high stability of the solution-processed BCzC4Sy film as the HTL and BCz3Ph:PO-T2T blended system as the EML in air. The bright and uniform green emission (Fig. 5f) without visible pinholes confirms the high solvent and air resistance of the thermally cross-linked BCzC4Sy film. It is noteworthy that the solvent resistance is a major limit of the slot-die coating method, it is evident that with the incorporation of a thermally cross-linkable material BCzC4Sy, a large-area OLED device with good efficiencies can be accomplished without using expensive vacuum deposition and extra operations with intricate exclusion of humidity and oxygen.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2tc04638e |
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