Solution-processable benzothiadiazole/triphenylamine-based hybridized local and charge-transfer (HLCT) hyper-structured molecular red emitters for OLEDs†
Abstract
The insolubility and severe self-aggregation tendency of hybridized localized and charge-transfer (HLCT) small molecular emitters have limited their application in solution-processed organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), particularly in red OLEDs. Herein, a series of solution-processable novel red hyper-structured molecular (HSM) HLCT emitters, CRA–MTBP(X)–mCP(8−X) (X = 8, 7, 6, 4, 2, 1 or 0), are designed. The benzothiadiazole/triphenylamine-based HLCT unit (MTBP) and the host unit (mCP) at different molar ratios were hooked up to the inactive calix[4]resorcinarene (CRA) core via efficient “Click” reactions, respectively. CRA–MTBP(X)-mCP(8−X) exhibited good thermal stability with a glass transition temperature (Tg) of above 120 °C and a decomposition temperatures (Td) exceeding 363 °C. UV-Vis, PL, and CV results demonstrated that these HSMs inherit the photophysical and electrochemical properties of the corresponding functional units. Spin-coating CRA–MTBP(X)–mCP(8−X) as light-emitting layers, all the non-doped diodes showed orange to red emission. Among them, a CRA–MTBP(8)–mCP(0)-based device emitted red light, with an EL emission peak (λEL) at 651 nm and CIE coordinates of (0.63, 0.36), a maximum external quantum efficiency (EQEmax) of 1.35% with low roll-off and a maximum luminance (Lmax) of 2831 cd m−2. Furthermore, the doped device based on CRA–MTBP(8)–mCP(0) using CBP as the host emitted bright red light with a λEL at 612 nm, an EQEmax of 3.27%, and a Lmax of 4362 cd m−2. These results indicate that the construction of HSMs by introducing red HLCT units could be an effective strategy for structuring solution-processable HLCT red emitters.