Hwan‐Hee Cho,Daniel G. Congrave,Alexander J. Gillett,Stephanie Montanaro,Haydn Francis,Víctor Riesgo‐González,Junzhi Ye,Rituparno Chowdury,Weixuan Zeng,Marc K. Etherington,Jeroen Royakkers,Oliver Millington,Andrew D. Bond,Felix Plasser,Jarvist M. Frost,Clare P. Grey,Akshay Rao,Richard H. Friend,Neil C. Greenham,Hugo Bronstein
Abstract Hyperfluorescence shows great promise for the next generation of commercially feasible blue organic light-emitting diodes, for which eliminating the Dexter transfer to terminal emitter triplet states is key to efficiency and stability. Current devices rely on high-gap matrices to prevent Dexter transfer, which unfortunately leads to overly complex devices from a fabrication standpoint. Here we introduce a molecular design where ultranarrowband blue emitters are covalently encapsulated by insulating alkylene straps. Organic light-emitting diodes with simple emissive layers consisting of pristine thermally activated delayed fluorescence hosts doped with encapsulated terminal emitters exhibit negligible external quantum efficiency drops compared with non-doped devices, enabling a maximum external quantum efficiency of 21.5%. To explain the high efficiency in the absence of high-gap matrices, we turn to transient absorption spectroscopy. It is directly observed that Dexter transfer from a pristine thermally activated delayed fluorescence sensitizer host can be substantially reduced by an encapsulated terminal emitter, opening the door to highly efficient ‘matrix-free’ blue hyperfluorescence.