Effects of Thermal Treatment on DC Voltage-Driven Color Conversion in Organic Light-Emitting Diode

Micromachines (Basel). 2022 Dec 23;14(1):30. doi: 10.3390/mi14010030.

Abstract

A DC voltage-dependent color-tunable organic light-emitting diode (CTOLED) was proposed for lighting applications. The CTOLED consists of six consecutive organic layers: the hole injection layer, the hole transport layer (HTL), two emission layers (EMLs), a hole blocking layer (HBL), and an electron transport layer (ETL). Only one metal-free phthalocyanine (H2Pc) layer with a thickness of 5 nm was employed as the EML in the CTOLED on a green organic light-emitting diode (OLED) structure using tris (8-hydroxyquinoline) aluminum (III) (Alq3). The current density-voltage-luminance characteristics of the CTOLEDs before and after thermal treatment were characterized and analyzed. Several Gaussian peaks were also extracted by multipeak fitting analysis of the electroluminescent spectra. In the CTOLED before thermal treatment, green emission was dominant in the entire voltage range from low to high voltages, and blue and infrared were emitted simultaneously and at relatively low intensities at low and high voltages, respectively. In the CTOLED after thermal treatment, the dominant color conversion from blue to green was observed as the applied voltage increased, and the infrared emission was relatively low over the entire voltage range. By simulating the CTOLED with and without traps at the H2Pc interface using a technology computer-aided design simulator, we observed the following: 1. After thermal treatment, the CTOLED emitted blue light by exciton generation at the H2Pc-HBL interface because of the small electron transport through the H2Pc thin film due to the dramatic reduction of traps in the low-voltage regime. 2. In the high-voltage regime, electrons reaching the HBL were transferred to Alq3 by resonant tunneling in two quantum wells; thus, green light was emitted by exciton generation at the HTL-Alq3 interface.

Keywords: OLED; color conversion; color tunable OLED; lighting; phthalocyanine; thermal treatment.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.