Organic single crystals with much higher carrier mobility and stability compared to the amorphous organic materials have shown great potential in electronic and optoelectronic devices. However, their applications in white… Click to show full abstract
Organic single crystals with much higher carrier mobility and stability compared to the amorphous organic materials have shown great potential in electronic and optoelectronic devices. However, their applications in white organic light-emitting devices (WOLEDs), especially the three-color-strategy WOLEDs, have been hindered by the difficulties in fabricating complicated device structures. Here, double-doped white-emission organic single crystals are used as the active layers for the first time in the three-colorstrategy WOLEDs by co-doping the red and green dopants into blue host crystals. Precise control of the dopant concentration in the double-doped crystals results in moderately partial energy transfer from the blue donor to the green and red dopants, and thereafter, simultaneous RGB emissions with balanced emission intensity. The highest color-rendering index (CRI) and efficiency, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, are obtained for the crystalbased WOLEDs. The CRI of the WOLEDs varies between 80 and 89 with the increase of the driving current, and the luminance and current efficiency reach up to 793 cd m−2 and 0.89 cd A−1, respectively. The demonstration of the present three-color organic single-crystal-based WOLED promotes the development of the single crystals in optoelectronics.
               
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