December 1, 2006
Conference Paper

Design strategies for achieving high triplet energy electron transporting host materials for blue electrophosphorescence

Abstract

High efficiency small molecule organic light emitting devices (OLEDs) based on light emission from an electrophosphorescent dopant dispersed in an organic host matrix are well known. Achieving blue phosphorescent OLEDs is particularly challenging because the host triplet energy should ideally be > 2.8 eV to prevent back-transfer of energy from the dopant to the host matrix resulting in loss of efficiency. A design strategy for developing new host materials with high triplet energies by using phosphine oxide (P=O) moieties as points of saturation in order to build sublimable, electron transporting host materials starting from small, wide bandgap molecular building blocks (i.e., biphenyl, phenyl, naphthalene, octafluorobiphenyl, and N-ethylcarbazole) is described. Electrophosphorescent OLEDs using the organic phosphine oxide compounds as host materials for the sky blue organometallic phosphor, iridium(III)bis(4,6-(di-fluorophenyl)-pyridinato-N,C2’) picolinate (FIrpic) give maximum external quantum efficiencies of ~ 8% and maximum luminance power efficiencies up to 25 lm/W.

Revised: August 22, 2007 | Published: December 1, 2006

Citation

Sapochak L.S., A.B. Padmaperuma, P.A. Vecchi, H. Qiao, and P.E. Burrows. 2006. Design strategies for achieving high triplet energy electron transporting host materials for blue electrophosphorescence. In Organic Light Emitting Materials and Devices X. Proceedings of SPIE, edited by Zakya H. Kafafi and Franky So, 6333, 57-69. Bellingham:International Society for Optical Engineering: SPIE. PNNL-SA-51005. doi:10.1117/12.684126