Narrow electroluminescence linewidths for reduced nonradiative recombination in organic solar cells and near-infrared light-emitting diodes

2021 
Summary The minimization of nonradiative recombination losses is essential to transcend the efficiency of state-of-the-art organic solar cells (OSCs) and near-infrared (NIR) organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). Indeed, reduced nonradiative processes will result in high electroluminescence (EL), external quantum efficiency (EQEEL), and low nonradiative voltage losses (ΔVOC,nr) for OSCs. Here, we study the EL properties of a set of polymer-small molecule blends and find a relationship between the EL emission linewidth, EQEEL, and ΔVOC,nr. Based on these findings, we reduce ΔVOC,nr from the typical values around 250 mV down to an unprecedented value of 155 mV using a blend comprising a low-molecular-weight PM6 polymer donor and a highly emissive nonfullerene acceptor (Y16F). Importantly, the PM6:Y16F blend yields an EQEEL (0.52%) among the best reported fluorescent NIR-OLEDs in the 900-nm range. These findings clearly indicate the existence of organic material blends that combine both excellent photovoltaic and electroluminescent properties.
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