Abstract

Spiral donor units have attracted extensive research focuses in designing highly emissive thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) emitters. Herein, to reveal the significance of spiral donor units for constructing highly efficient host materials, several spiral donor-based host materials are developed. With the incorporation of spiral donor, increased intermolecular distance is achieved to reduce the concentration quenching effect of dopant. Moreover, the high triplet energy level of spiral donor can provide an additional energy transfer channel to further improve the device performance. Noteworthy, by connecting spiral donors or conventional carbazole unit with different electron-withdrawing units phenoxathiine 10,10-dioxide (PX) or phenoxathiine (PA), these hosts are given different photophysical properties of TADF, room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) and conventional fluorescence (CF). The strong electron-withdrawing ability of PX is beneficial to the TADF character of spiral donor-based molecules, while the weak electron-withdrawing ability of PA is beneficial to the RTP property. Consequently, the blue OLEDs with DspiroAc-TRZ as a dopant emitter based on the hosts with TADF characters exhibit higher performance than those with RTP and CF properties, and excellent external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 36.1 % and current efficiency of 84.6 cd/A are achieved in a simple device structure. Furthermore, peak EQEs of 34.0 % and 33.0 % are achieved, when DspiroS-PX and DspiroS-PA hosted DspiroAc-TRZ are used to sensitize blue multi-resonance TADF emitter v-DABNA. Our work may shed new light on designing highly efficient host materials for TADF emitters.

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