Emitter-Host Interactions of High-Efficiency Deep Blue Single-Gaussian Europium (II) Emitters
Mahmoud Soleimani, Paulius Imbrasas, Jan-Michael Mewes, Felix Kaden, Stephanie Anna Buchholtz, Karl Leo, Sebastian Schellhammer, Carsten Rothe, Sebastian Reineke

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new molecular design for Eu(II) emitters with high quantum yields and thermal stability, enabling deep-blue OLEDs with high efficiency and narrow spectral width.
Contribution
It presents a novel Eu(II) emitter design combining crown-ether ligands and carborate anions, improving luminescence and stability for vacuum-deposited OLEDs.
Findings
Achieved near 90% quantum yield in Eu(II) emitters.
OLEDs with these emitters reach over 12% external quantum efficiency.
Identified key factors like molecular design and steric shielding for efficient luminescence.
Abstract
Eu(II) complexes are attractive emitters for deep-blue organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) due to their narrow, parity-allowed 4f-5d emission; however, their implementation in vacuum-processed OLEDs has remained limited. Here, we introduce a new molecular design concept for Eu(II) emitters, in which a crown-ether ligand is combined with carborate anions to define the coordination environment and improve steric shielding of the europium center. Based on this design, we present two emitters that combine narrow deep-blue photoluminescence with quantum yields approaching 90% and sufficient thermal stability for vacuum deposition. OLEDs incorporating these emitters exhibit electroluminescence at 456-458 nm, with spectral widths down to 36 nm and CIE coordinates as deep as (0.15, 0.06) and achieve a maximum external quantum efficiency above 12%. In order to find the pathway to maximum…
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