| Literature DB >> 29808489 |
Hirohiko Fukagawa1, Tsubasa Sasaki1, Toshimitsu Tsuzuki1, Yoshiki Nakajima1, Tatsuya Takei1, Genichi Motomura1, Munehiro Hasegawa2, Katsuyuki Morii2, Takahisa Shimizu1.
Abstract
Although organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are promising for use in applications such as in flexible displays, reports of long-lived flexible OLED-based devices are limited due to the poor environmental stability of OLEDs. Flexible substrates such as plastic allow ambient oxygen and moisture to permeate into devices, which degrades the alkali metals used for the electron-injection layer in conventional OLEDs (cOLEDs). Here, the fabrication of a long-lived flexible display is reported using efficient and stable inverted OLEDs (iOLEDs), in which electrons can be effectively injected without the use of alkali metals. The flexible display employing iOLEDs can emit light for over 1 year with simplified encapsulation, whereas a flexible display employing cOLEDs exhibits almost no luminescence after only 21 d with the same encapsulation. These results demonstrate the great potential of iOLEDs to replace cOLEDs employing alkali metals for use in a wide variety of flexible organic optoelectronic devices.Entities:
Keywords: air-stable; electron injection; flexible electronics; organic light-emitting diodes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29808489 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201706768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849