Abstract
Organic light-emitting transistors (OLETs) integrate the light-emitting and gate-modulated electrical switching functions in a single device. Over the past decades, progress has been made in developing new fluorescent semiconductors and device engineering that pushed efficiencies of OLET devices to 8%. However, this efficiency of transistors is still too low to be competitive with organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). Currently, there are relatively few suitable organic fluorescent semiconductors suitable for OLETs, and the mechanism of electroluminescence in the devices is still not fully understood. In this mini-review, we discuss the state of highly efficient OLETs and plausible approaches to those unsettled problems. Since this is a mini-review, we will not be able to cover all the excellent work in the literature. Readers are encouraged to read other excellent reviews published earlier.
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