| Literature DB >> 33155466 |
Yongmin Jeon1, Ilkoo Noh2, Young Cheol Seo1, Jun Hee Han1, Yongjin Park1, Eun Hae Cho1, Kyung Cheol Choi1.
Abstract
Deformable organic light-emitting diode (OLED) based optoelectronic devices hold promise for various wearable applications including biomedical systems and displays, but current OLED technologies require high voltage and lack the power needed for wearable photodynamic therapy (PDT) applications and wearable displays. This paper presents a parallel-stacked OLED (PAOLED) with high power, more than 100 mW/cm2, at low voltage (<8 V). The current dispersion ratio can be tuned by optimizing the structure of the individual OLEDs stacked to create the PAOLED, allowing control of the PAOLED's wavelength shapes, current efficiency, and power. In this study, a fabricated PAOLED operated reliably for 100 h at a high power of 35 mW/cm2. Confirming its potential application to PDT, the measured singlet oxygen generation ratio of the PAOLED was found to be 3.8 times higher than the reference OLED. The high-power PAOLED achieved a 24% reduction in melanoma cancer cell viability after a short (0.5 h) irradiation. In addition, a white light PAOLED with color tuning was realized through OLED color combination, and a high brightness of over 30 000 cd/m2 was realized, below 8.5 V. In conclusion, the PAOLED was demonstrated to be suitable for a variety of low-voltage, high-power wearable optoelectronic applications.Entities:
Keywords: color tuning; melanoma cancer; parallel-stacked OLED; photodynamic therapeutics; wearable optoelectronics; white OLED
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33155466 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c06649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881