化学
窄带
芯(光纤)
调制(音乐)
功能(生物学)
壳体(结构)
光学
声学
物理
复合材料
材料科学
进化生物学
生物
作者
Masahiro Hayakawa,Xun Tang,Yuta Ueda,Hayato Eguchi,Masakazu Kondo,Susumu Oda,Xiao‐Chun Fan,Gerardus N. Iswara Lestanto,Chihaya Adachi,Takuji Hatakeyama
摘要
Efficient red–green–blue primary luminescence with an extraordinarily narrow band and durability is crucial for advanced display applications. Recently, the emergence of multiple-resonance (MR) from short-range atomic interactions has been shown to induce extremely narrow spectral widths in pure organic emitters. However, achieving wide-range color tuning without compromising color purity remains a persistent challenge for MR emitters. Herein, the concept of electronic donor/acceptor "core–shell" modulation is proposed within a boron/nitrogen (B/N) MR skeleton, enabling the rational utilization of intramolecular charge transfer to facilitate wavelength shift. The dense B atoms localized at the center of the molecule effectively compress the electron density and stabilize the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital wave function. This electron-withdrawing core is embedded with peripheral electron-donating atoms. Consequently, doping a single B atom into a deep-blue MR framework led to a profound bathochromic shift from 447 to 624 nm (∼0.8 eV) while maintaining a narrow spectral width of 0.10 eV in this pure-red emitter. Notably, organic light-emitting diodes assisted by thermally activated delayed fluorescence molecules achieved superb electroluminescent stability, with an LT99 (99% of the initial luminance) exceeding 400 h at an initial luminance of 1000 cd m–2, approaching commercial-level performance without the assistance of phosphors.
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