White organic light-emitting diodes with an ultra-thin premixed emitting layer
T. Jeon (LPICM), Bernard Geffroy (ISCR), Denis Tondelier (LPICM), Yvan, Bonnassieux (LPICM), Sebastien Forget (LPL), Sebastien Chenais (LPL), Elena, Ishow (CEISAM)

TL;DR
This paper presents a method for fine color control in white OLEDs using an ultra-thin premixed emitting layer, enabling precise tuning of emitted light by adjusting layer position and composition.
Contribution
It introduces an ultra-thin premixed emitting layer approach that allows for highly controllable and reproducible color tuning in white OLEDs, improving stability and color accuracy.
Findings
Achieved white light with CIE coordinates (0.34, 0.34)
Demonstrated precise color control by adjusting layer position and premix composition
Maintained excellent color stability with injected current.
Abstract
We described an approach to achieve fine color control of fluorescent White Organic Light-Emitting Diodes (OLED), based on an Ultra-thin Premixed emitting Layer (UPL). The UPL consists of a mixture of two dyes (red-emitting 4-di(4'-tert-butylbiphenyl-4-yl)amino-4'-dicyanovinylbenzene or fvin and green-emitting 4-di(4'-tert-butylbiphenyl-4-yl)aminobenzaldehyde or fcho) premixed in a single evaporation cell: since these two molecules have comparable structures and similar melting temperatures, a blend can be evaporated, giving rise to thin films of identical and reproducible composition compared to those of the pre-mixture. The principle of fine color tuning is demonstrated by evaporating a 1-nm-thick layer of this blend within the hole-transport layer (4,4'-bis[N-(1-naphtyl)-N-phenylamino]biphenyl (\alpha-NPB)) of a standard fluorescent OLED structure. Upon playing on the position of the…
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