Leveraging specially-crafted organic molecules with a large singlet-triplet splitting, researchers from North Carolina State University demonstrated blue OLED chemistries capable of forming triplet excitons via direct charge injection.
Through subsequent triplet fusion, this allows the organic molecules to become electroluminescent below bandgap voltages, close to their triplet energy, yielding OLEDs operating with a low driving voltage.
The researchers disclosed their results in a Nature Communications paper titled, “Realization of high-efficiency fluorescent organic light-emitting diodes with low driving voltage”, reporting a blue fluorescent OLED more power-efficient than some of the best thermally-activated delayed fluorescent (TADF) and phosphorescent blue OLEDs reported so far, in spite of a lower quantum efficiency.
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