Efficient near-infrared organic light-emitting diodes with emission from spin doublet excitons

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Abstract

The development of luminescent organic radicals has resulted in materials with excellent optical properties for near-infrared emission. Applications of light generation in this range span from bioimaging to surveillance. Although the unpaired electron arrangements of radicals enable efficient radiative transitions within the doublet-spin manifold in organic light-emitting diodes, their performance is limited by non-radiative pathways introduced in electroluminescence. Here we present a host–guest design for organic light-emitting diodes that exploits energy transfer with up to 9.6% external quantum efficiency for 800 nm emission. The tris(2,4,6-trichlorophenyl)methyl-triphenyl-amine radical guest is energy-matched to the triplet state in a charge-transporting anthracene-derivative host. We show from optical spectroscopy and quantum-chemical modelling that reversible host–guest triplet–doublet energy transfer allows efficient harvesting of host triplet excitons.

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Cho, H. H., Gorgon, S., Londi, G., Giannini, S., Cho, C., Ghosh, P., … Evans, E. W. (2024). Efficient near-infrared organic light-emitting diodes with emission from spin doublet excitons. Nature Photonics, 18(9), 905–912. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-024-01458-3

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