A Comparative Study via Photophysical and Electrical
Characterizations on Interfacial and Bulk Exciplex-Forming Systems
for Efficient Organic Light-Emitting Diodes
posted on 2020-04-01, 19:08authored byNurul Ridho Al Amin, Kiran Kishore Kesavan, Sajal Biring, Chih-Chien Lee, Tzu-Hung Yeh, Tzu-Yu Ko, Shun-Wei Liu, Ken-Tsung Wong
An
efficient organic light-emitting diode based on the BCzPh:CN-T2T exciplex
as an emitting layer (EML) has been fabricated by exploiting charge
balance and favorable molecular orientations. To further understand
the details of the exciplex-forming mechanism, time-resolved photoluminescence
(TRPL), capacitance-voltage (CV), impedance spectroscopy (IS), and
transient electroluminescence (EL) measurements were used to probe
the photophysical and electrical characteristics of EL devices by
incorporating interfacial (BCzPh/CN-T2T) and bulk (BCzPh:CN-T2T) exciplexes
as the emitting layer. Interfacial- and bulk-exciplex devices exhibit
a maximum external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 7.7 and 26.4%, respectively.
The reason for different device performances was rationalized by comparing
the accumulated amount of charge density at the EML’s interface
responsible for exciplex emission. In addition, the TRPL measurement
monitored from short to long wavelengths was used to explore the harvest
of nonradiative triplets back to singlets via reverse intersystem
crossing and to examine the efficiency of delayed fluorescence. The
bulk-exciplex system showed a distinct delayed fluorescence as compared
to the interfacial one, which was also corroborated by the observation
in the transient EL. The result indicates that the bulk exciplex can
reduce the accumulated charge in the EML rapidly, resulting in improvement
of EL efficiency. This assumption was further verified by CV and IS
measurements. Our results reveal that the accumulated charge density
and the bulk resistance of the bulk-exciplex device are much lower
as compared to those of the interfacial counterpart device.