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      Recent progress on organic light-emitting diodes with phosphorescent ultrathin (<1nm) light-emitting layers

      review-article
      1 , 2 , , 1
      iScience
      Elsevier
      Organic chemistry, Optoelectronics, Optical Materials

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          Summary

          In recent years, phosphorescent dyes forming ultrathin light-emitting layers (<1 nm, UEMLs) have been widely applied to fabricate monochromatic and white organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) owing to its merits of simplified device structure and preparation process, more flexible design, lower material consumption, and complete exciton utilization. In addition, it was demonstrated that the OLEDs with UEMLs achieved high electroluminescence performance comparable to the conventional doping-based devices. Structurally, OLEDs were structured with phosphorescent UEMLs inserted into nonluminous materials, heterojunction interface as well as into luminescent materials including phosphorescent, conventional fluorescent, thermally activated delayed fluorescence, and exciplex emitters. We carefully reviewed the successful applications of UEMLs in OLEDs and underlying working mechanism of corresponding devices, and also emphasized the representative achievements about OLEDs with UEMLs, aimed at forming a comprehensive summary of the present research for UEMLs-based OLEDs. In the end, we also gave an outlook for the future development of UEMLs-based OLEDs

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          Organic chemistry; Optoelectronics; Optical Materials

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          White organic light-emitting diodes with fluorescent tube efficiency.

          The development of white organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) holds great promise for the production of highly efficient large-area light sources. High internal quantum efficiencies for the conversion of electrical energy to light have been realized. Nevertheless, the overall device power efficiencies are still considerably below the 60-70 lumens per watt of fluorescent tubes, which is the current benchmark for novel light sources. Although some reports about highly power-efficient white OLEDs exist, details about structure and the measurement conditions of these structures have not been fully disclosed: the highest power efficiency reported in the scientific literature is 44 lm W(-1) (ref. 7). Here we report an improved OLED structure which reaches fluorescent tube efficiency. By combining a carefully chosen emitter layer with high-refractive-index substrates, and using a periodic outcoupling structure, we achieve a device power efficiency of 90 lm W(-1) at 1,000 candelas per square metre. This efficiency has the potential to be raised to 124 lm W(-1) if the light outcoupling can be further improved. Besides approaching internal quantum efficiency values of one, we have also focused on reducing energetic and ohmic losses that occur during electron-photon conversion. We anticipate that our results will be a starting point for further research, leading to white OLEDs having efficiencies beyond 100 lm W(-1). This could make white-light OLEDs, with their soft area light and high colour-rendering qualities, the light sources of choice for the future.
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            White organic light-emitting diodes.

            White organic light-emitting diodes (WOLEDs) offer a range of attractive characteristics and are in several regards conceptually different from most currently used light sources. From an application perspective, their advantages include a high power efficiency that rivals the performance of fluorescent lamps and inorganic LEDs and the potential for a very low cost of manufacturing. As flat-panel light sources they are intrinsically glare-free and generate light over a large area. WOLEDs are constantly improving in terms of performance, durability, and manufacturability, but these improvements require joint research efforts in chemistry and the materials sciences to design better materials as well as in physics and engineering to invent new device concepts and design suitable fabrication schemes, a process that has generated many exciting scientific questions and answers. This article reviews current developments in the field of WOLEDs and puts a special focus on new device concepts and on approaches to reliable and cost-efficient WOLED manufacturing.
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              High-efficiency, long-lifetime deep-blue organic light-emitting diodes

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                iScience
                iScience
                iScience
                Elsevier
                2589-0042
                25 January 2022
                18 February 2022
                25 January 2022
                : 25
                : 2
                : 103804
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Key Laboratory of Interface Science and Engineering in Advanced Materials, Ministry of Education, Taiyuan University of Technology, Taiyuan, 030024, China
                [2 ]Shanxi-Zheda Institute of Advanced Materials and Chemical Engineering, 030000, Taiyuan, 030024, China
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author miaoyanqin@ 123456tyut.edu.cn
                Article
                S2589-0042(22)00074-8 103804
                10.1016/j.isci.2022.103804
                8844833
                2534ffb5-916a-4856-865a-61fe7d30ffea
                © 2022 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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                organic chemistry,optoelectronics,optical materials
                organic chemistry, optoelectronics, optical materials

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