Abstract

Understanding of the long-term thermal stabilities of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials during film deposition is important to accurately identifying their processing windows. The thermal stresses imposed on OLED materials in the evaporation source during the deposition process may cause phase transition and/or degradation of the source materials, which results in variations in their purity and thermal properties, such as the vapor pressure and, ultimately, the device degradation. In this work, we designed a simple and efficient apparatus to determine the long-term thermal stability of OLED materials, which allows prolonged heating of a minimal amount of the sample (∼2 g) for 50 h even under high vacuum below 10–4 Pa where the organic powder samples easily and rapidly vaporized because of exposure to temperature above their deposition temperature. We used this apparatus to evaluate the thermal degradation behaviors of N,N′-bis(1-naphthyl)-N,N′-diphenyl-(1,1′-biphenyl)-4,4′-diamine (NPB), which is a widely used hole-transporting material in OLEDs, upon prolonged exposure to various thermal stresses. After prolonged heating at 330 °C (380 °C) for 25 h (50 h), the change in purity, mass, vapor pressure, and phase of the heated NPB were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography, liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry, thermogravimetric analysis, and X-ray diffraction. The lifetime of OLEDs using the heated NPB was measured to study how the thermally induced material degradation affects the device characteristics. The results showed that the NPB degradation caused by prolonged exposure to 330 °C accelerated over time. In addition, it was confirmed that the degradation products with high molecular weight that form due to exposure to 380 °C was the main cause of device degradation.

Highlights

  • Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials in the evaporation source are heated to a temperature at which a sufficient evaporation rate can be obtained until one complete cycle of the deposition process for a certain duration.[1−3] The thermal stress may cause isomerization, polymerization, and/or decomposition of the materials.[4−6] The phase transition and purity change of the material to be evaporated can change their thermal properties, such as the melting point and vapor pressure; they can affect the morphological stability of the deposited film and successive changes in electrical and optical characteristics of the device.[7]

  • We have developed a simple and efficient apparatus to evaluate the long-term thermal stability of OLED materials in high vacuum to understand the effects of the changes in purity of the deposition source material, which occur during the OLED deposition process, on the fabricated thin film and OLED

  • We confirmed that increasing impurities caused by the decomposition of NPB when NPB was exposed to thermal stress affected the OLED properties.[9]

Read more

Summary

■ INTRODUCTION

Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials in the evaporation source are heated to a temperature at which a sufficient evaporation rate can be obtained until one complete cycle of the deposition process for a certain duration (approximately several tens to several hundreds of hours).[1−3] The thermal stress may cause isomerization, polymerization, and/or decomposition of the materials.[4−6] The phase transition and purity change of the material to be evaporated can change their thermal properties, such as the melting point and vapor pressure; they can affect the morphological stability of the deposited film and successive changes in electrical and optical characteristics of the device.[7] Little attention has been paid to the changes in purity and physical properties of deposition source materials during OLED fabrication, that is, the long-term thermal stability of OLED materials. We have developed a simple and efficient apparatus to evaluate the long-term thermal stability of OLED materials in high vacuum to understand the effects of the changes in purity of the deposition source material, which occur during the OLED deposition process, on the fabricated thin film and OLED. By confirming the characteristics of devices obtained from these materials, the long-term thermal stabilities of NPB in high vacuum were tested

■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
■ CONCLUSIONS
■ REFERENCES
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call