TY - JOUR
T1 - Cibalackrot Dendrimers for Hyperfluorescent Organic Light-Emitting Diodes
AU - Wallwork, Nicholle R.
AU - Mamada, Masashi
AU - Keto, Angus B.
AU - McGregor, Sarah K.M.
AU - Shukla, Atul
AU - Adachi, Chihaya
AU - Krenske, Elizabeth H.
AU - Namdas, Ebinazar B.
AU - Lo, Shih Chun
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank the Australian Research Council (No. ARC DP200103036), Department of Industry, Innovation and Science (No. AISRF53765), and JSPS Core‐to‐Core Program (No. JPJSCCA20180005) for financial support. N.R.W. was funded by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. A.B.K. and E.H.K. were funded by the Australian Research Council (No. DP180103047) and used resources from the UQ Research Computing Centre. M.M. acknowledges financial support from JSPS KAKENHI (Nos. 19H02790, 20K21227, and 21H05401), and Inamori Foundation. This work was performed in part at the Queensland node of the Australian National Fabrication Facility Queensland Node (ANFF‐Q), a company established under the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy to provide nano‐ and microfabrication facilities for Australia's researchers.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Macromolecular Rapid Communications published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Hyperfluorescent organic light-emitting diodes (HF-OLEDs) enable a cascading Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) from a suitable thermally activated delayed fluorescent (TADF) assistant host to a fluorescent end-emitter to give efficient OLEDs with relatively narrowed electroluminescence compared to TADF-OLEDs. Efficient HF-OLEDs require optimal FRET with minimum triplet diffusion via Dexter-type energy transfer (DET) from the TADF assistant host to the fluorescent end-emitter. To hinder DET, steric protection of the end-emitters has been proposed to disrupt triplet energy transfer. In this work, the first HF-OLEDs based on structurally well-defined macromolecules, dendrimers is reported. The dendrimers contain new highly twisted dendrons attached to a Cibalackrot core, resulting in high solubility in organic solvents. HF-OLEDs based on dendrimer blend films are fabricated to show external quantum efficiencies of >10% at 100 cd m−2. Importantly, dendronization with the bulky dendrons is found to have no negative impact to the FRET efficiency, indicating the excellent potential of the dendritic macromolecular motifs for HF-OLEDs. To fully prevent the undesired triplet diffusion, Cibalackrot dendrimers HF-OLEDs are expected to be further improved by adding additional dendrons to the Cibalackrot core and/or increasing dendrimer generations.
AB - Hyperfluorescent organic light-emitting diodes (HF-OLEDs) enable a cascading Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) from a suitable thermally activated delayed fluorescent (TADF) assistant host to a fluorescent end-emitter to give efficient OLEDs with relatively narrowed electroluminescence compared to TADF-OLEDs. Efficient HF-OLEDs require optimal FRET with minimum triplet diffusion via Dexter-type energy transfer (DET) from the TADF assistant host to the fluorescent end-emitter. To hinder DET, steric protection of the end-emitters has been proposed to disrupt triplet energy transfer. In this work, the first HF-OLEDs based on structurally well-defined macromolecules, dendrimers is reported. The dendrimers contain new highly twisted dendrons attached to a Cibalackrot core, resulting in high solubility in organic solvents. HF-OLEDs based on dendrimer blend films are fabricated to show external quantum efficiencies of >10% at 100 cd m−2. Importantly, dendronization with the bulky dendrons is found to have no negative impact to the FRET efficiency, indicating the excellent potential of the dendritic macromolecular motifs for HF-OLEDs. To fully prevent the undesired triplet diffusion, Cibalackrot dendrimers HF-OLEDs are expected to be further improved by adding additional dendrons to the Cibalackrot core and/or increasing dendrimer generations.
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U2 - 10.1002/marc.202200118
DO - 10.1002/marc.202200118
M3 - Article
C2 - 35355352
AN - SCOPUS:85128092138
SN - 1022-1336
JO - Macromolecular Rapid Communications
JF - Macromolecular Rapid Communications
ER -