Abstract
We report that the steady-state electroluminescence in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) based on anthracene derivatives has a substantial contribution from annihilation of triplet states generated by recombining charge carriers. For the OLED devices of the following general structure: indium tin oxide N, N′ -diphenyl- N, N′ -bis(1-naphthyl)- 1, 1′ -biphenyl- 4, 4′ -diamine9,10-bis(2-naphthyl)-2- t -butylanthracene Al q3 (tris(8-hydroxyquinolate)aluminum) LiFAl, triplet-triplet annihilation contributes as much as 3%-6% of the overall electroluminescence. The intensity of triplet-triplet annihilation-related emission strongly varies with the current density and pulse width, being quadratic and linear functions of current density at low (<5 mA cm2) and high (>10 mA cm2) current density regimes, respectively. We find that quenching by charge carriers is the dominant decay process for the triplet states under a wide range of operating conditions, yielding triplet-state lifetimes from tens to hundreds of microseconds. The decrease in charge-carrier concentrations through improved injection and transport may be expected not only to lower operational voltage but also to enhance triplet-triplet annihilation and, consequently, overall electroluminescence efficiency. © 2007 American Institute of Physics.
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CITATION STYLE
Kondakov, D. Y. (2007). Characterization of triplet-triplet annihilation in organic light-emitting diodes based on anthracene derivatives. Journal of Applied Physics, 102(11). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2818362
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