E. Fresta, J. Dosso, J. Cabanillas-Gonzalez, D. Bonifazi, R. D. Costa.
ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2020, 12, 28426−28434.
Abstract
Self-heating in light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) has been long overlooked, while it has a significant impact on (i) device chromaticity by changing the electroluminescent band shape, (ii) device efficiency because of thermal quenching and exciton dissociation reducing the external quantum efficiency (EQE), and (iii) device stability because of thermal degradation of excitons and eliminate doped species, phase separation, and collapse of the intrinsic emitting zone. Herein, we reveal, for the first time, a direct relationship between self-heating and the early changes in the device chromaticityas well as the magnitude of the error comparing theoretical/experimental EQEs that is,an overestimation error ofca. 35% at usual pixel working temperatures of around 50°C. This has been realized in LECs using a benchmark nanographene that is, a substituted hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene as an emerging class of emitters with outstanding device performance compared to the prior art of small-molecule LECs for example, luminances of 345 cd/m2 and EQEs of 0.35%. As such, this work is a fundamental contribution highlighting how self-heating is a critical limitation toward the optimization and wide use of LECs.
