Author:
Soultati Anastasia,Verykios Apostolis,Tsekouras Marios,Georgiopoulou Zoi,Vidali Veroniki,Pistolis Georgios,Davazoglou Dimitris,Coutsolelos Athanassios G.,Ogawa Marina,Skandamis Panagiotis N.,Argitis Panagiotis,Otsuki Joe,Vasilopoulou Maria
Abstract
AbstractCharge injection and transport interlayers based on artificial green carbon materials are imperative for a sustainable future of many classes of optoelectronic devices, including organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). Especially, porphyrin derivatives can act as efficient energy and charge funnels mimicking their successful photosynthetic function. Here, we report on the application of a novel green carbon material, in particular, a zinc porphyrin derivative bearing an amidine functional group (referred to as ZnP-amidine), as an electron transport material in fluorescent OLEDs based on a green-yellow co-polymer emitter. ZnP-amidine is processed from environmental friendly solvents without any annealing requirements thus being suitable for low-cost sustainable optoelectronics. It is applies as an ultra-thin interlayer between the aluminum cathode and the emissive layer to enable efficient electron transport and stable performance. This work paves the path towards low-cost green carbon materials inspired by natural processes for organic optoelectronics.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC