The present invention relates to electroluminescent materials and to electroluminescent devices.
Materials that emit light when an electric current is passed through them are well known and used in a wide range of display applications. Devices which are based on inorganic semiconductor systems are widely used. However these suffer from the disadvantages of high energy consumption, high cost of manufacture, low quantum efficiency and the inability to make flat panel displays. Organic polymers have been proposed as useful in electroluminescent devices, but it is not possible to obtain pure colours; they are expensive to make and have a relatively low efficiency. Another electroluminescent compound which has been proposed is aluminium quinolate, but it requires dopants to be used to obtain a range of colours and has a relatively low efficiency.
Patent application WO98/58037 describes a range of transition metal and lanthanide complexes which can be used in electroluminescent devices which have improved properties and give better results. Patent Applications PCT/GB98/01773, PCT/GB99/03619, PCT/GB99/04030, PCT/GB99/04024, PCT/GB99/04028 and PCT/GB00/00268 describe electroluminescent complexes, structures and devices using rare earth chelates. U.S. Pat. No. 5,128,587 discloses an electroluminescent device which consists of an organometallic complex of rare earth elements of the lanthanide series sandwiched between a transparent electrode of high work function and a second electrode of low work function, with a hole conducting layer interposed between the electroluminescent layer and the transparent high work function electrode, and an electron conducting layer interposed between the electroluminescent layer and the electron injecting low work function anode. The hole conducting layer and the electron conducting layer are required to improve the working and the efficiency of the device. The hole transporting layer serves to transport holes and to block the electrons, thus preventing electrons from moving into the electrode without recombining with holes. The recombination of carriers therefore mainly takes place in the emitter layer.
In order to enhance the performance of electroluminescent organo metallic complexes the electroluminescent organo metallic complex can be mixed with a host material and we have now devised an improved electroluminescent material using a metal quinolate as the host material.
According to the invention there is provided an electroluminescent composition which comprises a mixture of a substituted or unsubstituted metal quinolate and an electroluminescent organo metallic complex.
The invention also provides an electroluminescent device which comprises (i) a first electrode, (ii) a layer of an electroluminescent composition comprising a mixture of a substituted or unsubstituted metal quinolate and an electroluminescent organo metallic complex and (iii) a second electrode.
The metal forming the metal quinolate can be selected from sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, beryllium, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, copper (I), copper (II), silver, gold, zinc, cadmium, boron, aluminium, gallium, indium, germanium, tin (II), tin (IV), antimony (II), antimony (IV), lead (II), lead (IV) and metals of the first, second and third groups of transition metals in different valence states e.g. manganese, iron, ruthenium, osmium, cobalt, nickel, palladium(II), palladium(IV), platinum(II), platinum(IV), cadmium, chromium. titanium, vanadium, zirconium, tantalum, niobium molybdenum, rhodium, iridium, titanium, niobium, scandium, yttrium and the preferred metals are lithium, aluminium, titanium, zirconium, hafnium, vanadium, niobium or tantalum; lithium quinolate is the most preferred metal.
Some metal quinolates are electroluminescent materials and, in particular lithium quinolate is a known electroluminescent material and WO 00/32717 discloses a lithium quinolate which is made by the reaction of n-butyl lithium with 8-hydroxy quinoline in an acetonitrile solvent and which emits light in the blue region of the spectrum.
Provided the light emitting band gap of the electroluminescent organo metallic complex is wider than the band gap of the light emitting excited singlet state of the metal quinolate host material and the light emitting band gap of the electroluminescent organo metallic complex material is within the excited singlet state of the metal quinolate host material the metal quinolate makes no contribution to the colour of the light emitted by the mixture of the electroluminescent organo metallic complex and lithium quinolate.
Preferably the HOMO-LUMO gap of the organo metallic complex is within the HOMO-LUMO gap of the metal quinolate.
One type of preferred organo metallic complexes are the ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium or platinum iridium complexes and, in particular, iridium complexes:—
wherein M is ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium or platinum; n is 1 or 2; R1-R5 which may be the same or different are selected from substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups; substituted and unsubstituted monocyclic and polycyclic heterocyclic groups; substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyloxy or carboxy groups; fluorocarbyl groups; halogen; nitrile; nitro; amino; alkylamino; dialkylamino; arylamino; diarylamino; N-alkylamido, N-arylamido, sulfonyl and thiophenyl; and R2 and R3 can additionally be alkylsilyl or arylsilyl; p, s and t independently are 0, 1, 2 or 3; subject to the proviso that where any of p, s and t is 2 or 3 only one of them can be other than saturated hydrocarbyl or halogen; q and r independently are 0, 1 or 2, subject to the proviso that when q or r is 2, only one of them can be other than saturated hydrocarbyl or halogen where R1, R2, R3, R4, R5 and R6 can be the same or different and are selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups such as substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups; R1, R2 and R3 can also form substituted and unsubstituted fused aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures and can be copolymerisable with a monomer, e.g. styrene, and where R4, and R5 can be the same or different and are selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups such as substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups; R1, R2 and R3 can also form substituted and unsubstituted fused aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures and can be copolymerisable with a monomer, or R5 and R6 form a
Group and M is ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium or platinum and n+2 is the valency of M. Preferably M is iridium.
Other preferred organo metallic complexes are of formula M(L)n and MO(L)n-2 where M is a metal in a valency state n of greater than 3 and L is an organic ligand, the ligands L can be the same or different, e.g. M(L1) (L2) (L3) (L4) . . . or MO(L1) (L2) . . . .
Preferably the metal M is a transition metal such as titanium, zirconium or hafnium in the four valency state or vanadium, niobium or tantalum in the five valency state and in particular is zirconium quinolate.
Patent Application WO 2004/058913, the contents of which are included by reference, discloses doped zirconium quinolates which can be used in the present invention.
Preferably the electroluminescent compound is doped with a minor amount of a fluorescent material as a dopant, preferably in an amount of 5 to 15% of the doped mixture.
As discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,769,292, the contents of which are included by reference, the presence of the fluorescent material permits a choice from among a wide latitude of wavelengths of light emission.
Useful fluorescent materials are those capable of being blended with the organo metallic complex and fabricated into thin films satisfying the thickness ranges described above forming the luminescent zones of the EL devices of this invention. While crystalline organo metallic complexes do not lend themselves to thin film formation, the limited amounts of fluorescent materials present in the organo metallic complex materials permits the use of fluorescent materials which are alone incapable of thin film formation. Preferred fluorescent materials are those which form a common phase with the organo metallic complex material. Fluorescent dyes constitute a preferred class of fluorescent materials, since dyes lend themselves to molecular level distribution in the organo metallic complex. Although any convenient technique for dispersing the fluorescent dyes in the organo metallic complexes can be undertaken, preferred fluorescent dyes are those which can be vacuum vapour deposited along with the organo metallic complex materials. Assuming other criteria, noted above, are satisfied, fluorescent laser dyes are recognized to be particularly useful fluorescent materials for use in the organic EL devices of this invention. Dopants which can be used include diphenylacridine, coumarins, perylene and their derivatives.
Useful fluorescent dopants are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,769,292.
The organometallic complex can be mixed with a dopant and co-deposited with it, preferably by dissolving the dopant and the organometallic complex in the solvent and spin coating the mixed solution.
Other electroluminescent compounds which can be used as the electroluminescent material in the present invention are of general formula (Lα)nM where M is a rare earth, lanthanide or an actinide, Lα is an organic complex and n is the valence state of M.
Further organic electroluminescent compounds which can be used in the present invention are of formula
where Lα and Lp are organic ligands, M is a rare earth, transition metal, lanthanide or an actinide and n is the valence state of the metal M. The ligands Lα can be the same or different and there can be a plurality of ligands Lp which can be the same or different.
For example, (L1)(L2)(L3)(L . . . )M(Lp) where M is a rare earth, transition metal, lanthanide or an actinide and (L1)(L2)(L3)(L . . . ) are the same or different organic complexes and (Lp) is a neutral ligand. The total charge of the ligands (L1)(L2)(L3)(L . . . ) is equal to the valence state of the metal M. Where there are 3 groups Lα which corresponds to the III valence state of M the complex has the formula (L1)(L2)(L3)M (Lp) and the different groups (L1)(L2)(L3) may be the same or different.
Lp can be monodentate, bidentate or polydentate and there can be one or more ligands Lp.
Preferably M is a metal ion having an unfilled inner shell and the preferred metals are selected from Sm(III), Eu(II), Eu(III), Tb(III), Dy(III), Yb(III), Lu(III), Gd (III), Gd(III) U(III), Tm(III), Ce (III), Pr(III), Nd(III), Pm(III), Dy(III), Ho(III), Er(III), Yb(III) and more preferably Eu(III), Tb(III), Dy(III), Gd (III), Er (III), Yt(III).
Further organic electroluminescent compounds which can be used in the present invention are of general formula (Lα)nM1M2 where M1 is the same as M above, M2 is a non rare earth metal, Lα is as above and n is the combined valence state of M1 and M2. The complex can also comprise one or more neutral ligands Lp so the complex has the general formula (Lα)nM1M2 (Lp), where Lp is as above. The metal M2 can be any metal which is not a rare earth, transition metal, lanthanide or an actinide. Examples of metals which can be used include lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, beryllium, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, copper (I), copper (II), silver, gold, zinc, cadmium, boron, aluminium, gallium, indium, germanium, tin (II), tin (IV), antimony (II), antimony (IV), lead (II), lead (IV) and metals of the first, second and third groups of transition metals in different valence states e.g. manganese, iron, ruthenium, osmium, cobalt, nickel, palladium(II), palladium(IV), platinum(II), platinum(IV), cadmium, chromium. titanium, vanadium, zirconium, tantalum, molybdenum, rhodium, iridium, titanium, niobium, scandium, yttrium.
For example (L1)(L2)(L3)(L . . . )M (Lp) where M is a rare earth, transition metal, lanthanide or an actinide and (L1)(L2)(L3)(L . . . ) and (Lp) are the same or different organic complexes.
Further organometallic complexes which can be used in the present invention are binuclear, trinuclear and polynuclear organometallic complexes e.g. of formula (Lm)xM1←M2(Ln)y e.g.
where L is a bridging ligand and where M1 is a rare earth metal and M2 is M1 or a non rare earth metal, Lm and Ln are the same or different organic ligands Lα as defined above, x is the valence state of M1 and y is the valence state of M2.
In these complexes there can be a metal to metal bond or there can be one or more bridging ligands between M1 and M2 and the groups Lm and Ln can be the same or different.
By trinuclear is meant there are three rare earth metals joined by a metal to metal bond i.e. of formula
where M1, M2 and M3 are the same or different rare earth metals and Lm, Ln and Lp are organic ligands Lα and x is the valence state of M1, y is the valence state of M2 and z is the valence state of M3. Lp can be the same as Lm and Ln or different.
The rare earth metals and the non rare earth metals can be joined together by a metal to metal bond and/or via an intermediate bridging atom, ligand or molecular group.
For example the metals can be linked by bridging ligands e.g.
where L is a bridging ligand.
By polynuclear is meant there are more than three metals joined by metal to metal bonds and/or via intermediate ligands
M1-M2-M3-M4
or
M1-M2-M4-M3
or
where M1, M2, M3 and M4 are rare earth metals and L is a bridging ligand.
Preferably L is selected from a diketones such as those of formulae
where R1, R2 and R3 can be the same or different and are selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups such as substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups; R1, R2 and R3 can also form substituted and unsubstituted fused aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures and can be copolymerisable with a monomer e.g. styrene. X is Se, S or O, Y can be hydrogen, substituted or unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups, such as substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorine, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups or nitrile.
The beta diketones can be polymer substituted beta diketones and in the polymer, oligomer or dendrimer substituted β diketone the substituents group can be directly linked to the diketone or can be linked through one or more —CH2 groups i.e.
or through phenyl groups e.g.
where “polymer” can be a polymer, an oligomer or a dendrimer, (there can be one or two substituted phenyl groups as well as three as shown in (IIIc)) and where R is selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups such as substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups.
Examples of R1 and/or R2 and/or R3 include aliphatic, aromatic and heterocyclic alkoxy, aryloxy and carboxy groups, substituted and substituted phenyl, fluorophenyl, biphenyl, phenanthrene, anthracene, naphthyl and fluorene groups alkyl groups such as t-butyl, heterocyclic groups such as carbazole.
Some of the different groups Lα may also be the same or different charged groups such as carboxylate groups so that the group L1 can be as defined above and the groups L2, L3 . . . can be charged groups such as
where R is R1 as defined above or the groups L1, L2 can be as defined above and L3 . . . etc. are other charged groups.
R1, R2 and R3 can also be
A preferred moiety R1 is trifluoromethyl CF3 and examples of such diketones are, banzoyltrifluoroacetone, p-chlorobenzoyltrifluoroacetone, p-bromotrifluoroacetone, p-phenyltrifluoroacetone, 1-naphthoyltrifluoroacetone, 2-naphthoyltrifluoroacetone, 2-phenathoyltrifluoroacetone, 3-phenanthoyltrifluoroacetone, 9-anthroyltrifluoroacetonetrifluoroacetone, cinnamoyltrifluoroacetone, and 2-thenoyltrifluoroacetone.
The different groups Lα may be the same or different ligands of formulae
where X is O, S, or Se and R1 R2 and R3 are as above.
The different groups Lα may be the same or different quinolate derivatives such as
where R is hydrocarbyl, aliphatic, aromatic or heterocyclic carboxy, aryloxy, hydroxy or alkoxy e.g. the 8 hydroxy quinolate derivatives or
where R, R1, and R2 are as above or are H or F e.g. R1 and R2 are alkyl or alkoxy groups
As stated above the different groups Lα may also be the same or different carboxylate groups e.g.
where R5 is a substituted or unsubstituted aromatic, polycyclic or heterocyclic ring a polypyridyl group, R5 can also be a 2-ethyl hexyl group so Ln is 2-ethylhexanoate or R5 can be a chair structure so that Ln is 2-acetyl cyclohexanoate or Lα can be
where R is as above e.g. alkyl, allenyl, amino or a fused ring such as a cyclic or polycyclic ring.
The different groups L may also be
where R, R1 and R2 are as above.
The groups LP can be selected from
where each Ph which can be the same or different and can be a phenyl (OPNP) or a substituted phenyl group, other substituted or unsubstituted aromatic group, a substituted or unsubstituted heterocyclic or polycyclic group, a substituted or unsubstituted fused aromatic group such as a naphthyl, anthracene, phenanthrene or pyrene group. The substituents can be for example an alkyl, aralkyl, alkoxy, aromatic, heterocyclic, polycyclic group, halogen such as fluorine, cyano, amino, substituted amino etc. Examples are given in
where R is as above.
Lp can also be compounds of formulae
where R1, R2 and R3 are as referred to above, for example bathophen shown in
where R1, R2 and R3 are as referred to above.
Lp can also be
where Ph is as above.
Other examples of Lp chelates are as shown in
Specific examples of Lα and Lp are tripyridyl and TMHD, and TMHD complexes, α, α′, α″ tripyridyl, crown ethers, cyclans, cryptans phthalocyanans, porphoryins ethylene diamine tetramine (EDTA), DCTA, DTPA and TTHA, where TMHD is 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionato and OPNP is diphenylphosphonimide triphenyl phosphorane. The formulae of the polyamines are shown in
Other organic electroluminescent materials which can be used include metal quinolates such as lithium quinolate, and non rare earth metal complexes such as aluminium, magnesium, zinc and scandium complexes such as complexes of β-diketones e.g. Tris-(1,3-diphenyl-1-3-propanedione) (DBM) and suitable metal complexes are Al(DBM)3, Zn(DBM)2 and Mg(DBM)2, Sc(DBM)3 etc.
Other organic electroluminescent materials which can be used include the metal complexes of formula
where M is a metal other than a rare earth, a transition metal, a lanthanide or an actinide; n is the valency of M; R1, R2 and R3 which may be the same or different are selected from hydrogen, hydrocarbyl groups, substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups or nitrile; R1, and R3 can also be form ring structures and R1, R2 and R3 can be copolymerisable with a monomer e.g. styrene. Preferably M is aluminium and R3 is a phenyl or substituted phenyl group.
Other organic electroluminescent materials which can be used include electroluminescent diiridium compounds of formula
where R1, R2, R3 and R4 can be the same or different and are selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups; preferably R1, R2, R3 and R4 are selected from substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups; R1, R2 and R3 can also form substituted and unsubstituted fused aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures and can be copolymerisable with a monomer and L1 and L2 are the same or different organic ligands and more preferably L1 and L2 are selected from phenyl pyridine and substituted phenylpryidines.
Other electroluminescent compounds which can be used are of formula
where Ph is an unsubstituted or substituted phenyl group where the substituents can be the same or different and are selected from hydrogen, and substituted and unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups such as substituted and unsubstituted aliphatic groups, substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups; R, R1 and R2 can be hydrogen or substituted or unsubstituted hydrocarbyl groups, such as substituted and unsubstituted aromatic, heterocyclic and polycyclic ring structures, fluorine, fluorocarbons such as trifluoryl methyl groups, halogens such as fluorine or thiophenyl groups or nitrile.
Examples of R and/or R1 and/or R2 and/or R3 include aliphatic, aromatic and heterocyclic alkoxy, aryloxy and carboxy groups, substituted and substituted phenyl, fluorophenyl, biphenyl, phenanthrene, anthracene, naphthyl and fluorene groups alkyl groups such as t-butyl, heterocyclic groups such as carbazole.
Further electroluminescent materials which can be used include metal quinolates such as aluminium quinolate, lithium quinolate, zirconium quinolate etc. and metal quinolates doped with fluorescent materials or dies as disclosed in patent application WO/2004/058913.
The metal quinolate host and the electroluminescent material must be different.
The thickness of the layer of the electroluminescent material is preferably from 10-250 nm, more preferably 20-75 nm.
The first electrode can function as the anode and the second electrode can function as the cathode and preferably there is a layer of a hole transporting material between the anode and the layer of the electroluminescent compound.
The hole transporting material can be any of the hole transporting materials used in electroluminescent devices.
The hole transporting material can be an amine complex such as α-NBP, poly (vinylcarbazole), N,N′-diphenyl-N,N′-bis(3-methylphenyl)-1,1′-biphenyl-4,4′-diamine (TPD), an unsubstituted or substituted polymer of an amino substituted aromatic compound, a polyaniline, substituted polyanilines, polythiophenes, substituted polythiophenes, polysilanes and substituted polysilanes etc. Examples of polyanilines are polymers of:
where R is in the ortho- or meta-position and is hydrogen, C1-18 alkyl, C1-6 alkoxy, amino, chloro, bromo, hydroxy or the group:
where R is alkyl or aryl and R′ is hydrogen, C1-6 alkyl or aryl with at least one other monomer of formula II above.
Alternatively the hole transporting material can be a polyaniline. Polyanilines which can be used in the present invention have the general formula:
where p is from 1 to 10 and n is from 1 to 20, R is as defined above and X is an anion, preferably selected from Cl, Br, SO4, BF4, PF6, H2PO3, H2PO4, arylsulphonate, arenedicarboxylate, polystyrenesulphonate, polyacrylate alkylsulphonate, vinylsulphonate, vinylbenzene sulphonate, cellulose sulphonate, camphor sulphonate, cellulose sulphate or a perfluorinated polyanion.
Examples of arylsulphonates are p-toluenesulphonate, benzenesulphonate, 9,10-anthraquinone-sulphonate and anthracenesulphonate. An example of an arenedicarboxylate is phthalate and an example of arenecarboxylate is benzoate.
We have found that protonated polymers of the unsubstituted or substituted polymer of an amino substituted aromatic compound such as a polyaniline are difficult to evaporate or cannot be evaporated. However we have surprisingly found that if the unsubstituted or substituted polymer of an amino substituted aromatic compound is deprotonated, then it can be easily evaporated, i.e. the polymer is evaporable.
Preferably evaporable deprotonated polymers of unsubstituted or substituted polymers of an amino substituted aromatic compound are used. The deprotonated unsubstituted or substituted polymer of an amino substituted aromatic compound can be formed by deprotonating the polymer by treatment with an alkali such as ammonium hydroxide or an alkali metal hydroxide such as sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide.
The degree of protonation can be controlled by forming a protonated polyaniline and deprotonating. Methods of preparing polyanilines are described in the article by A. G. MacDiamid and A. F. Epstein, Faraday Discussions, Chem Soc. 88 P319, 1989.
The conductivity of the polyaniline is dependent on the degree of protonation with the maximum conductivity being when the degree of protonation is between 40 and 60%, for example about 50%.
Preferably the polymer is substantially fully deprotonated.
A polyaniline can be formed of octamer units. i.e. p is four, e.g.
The polyanilines can have conductivities of the order of 1×10−1 Siemen cm−1 or higher.
The aromatic rings can be unsubstituted or substituted, e.g. by a C1 to 20 alkyl group such as ethyl.
The polyaniline can be a copolymer of aniline and preferred copolymers are the copolymers of aniline with o-anisidine, m-sulphanilic acid or o-aminophenol, or o-toluidine with o-aminophenol, o-ethylaniline, o-phenylene diamine or with amino anthracenes.
Other polymers of an amino substituted aromatic compound which can be used include substituted or unsubstituted polyaminonapthalenes, polyaminoanthracenes, polyaminophenanthrenes, etc. and polymers of any other condensed polyaromatic compound. Polyaminoanthracenes and methods of making them are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,153,726. The aromatic rings can be unsubstituted or substituted, e.g. by a group R as defined above.
Other hole transporting materials are conjugated polymers and the conjugated polymers which can be used can be any of the conjugated polymers disclosed or referred to in U.S. Pat. No. 5,807,627, WO90/13148 and WO92/03490.
The preferred conjugated polymers are poly(p-phenylenevinylene) (PPV) and copolymers including PPV. Other preferred polymers are poly(2,5 dialkoxyphenylene vinylene) such as poly[(2-methoxy-5-(2-methoxypentyloxy-1,4-phenylene vinylene)], poly[(2-methoxypentyloxy)-1,4-phenylenevinylene], poly[(2-methoxy-5-(2-dodecyloxy-1,4-phenylenevinylene)] and other poly(2,5dialkoxyphenylenevinylenes) with at least one of the alkoxy groups being a long chain solubilising alkoxy group, polyfluorenes and oligofluorenes, polyphenylenes and oligophenylenes, polyanthracenes and oligoanthracenes, polythiophenes and oligothiophenes.
In PPV the phenylene ring may optionally carry one or more substituents, e.g. each independently selected from alkyl, preferably methyl, or alkoxy, preferably methoxy or ethoxy.
In polyfluorene, the fluorene ring may optionally carry one or more substituents e.g. each independently selected from alkyl, preferably methyl, alkoxy, preferably methoxy or ethoxy.
Any poly(arylenevinylene) including substituted derivatives thereof can be used and the phenylene ring in poly(p-phenylenevinylene) may be replaced by a fused ring system such as an anthracene or naphthalene ring and the number of vinylene groups in each poly(phenylenevinylene) moiety can be increased, e.g. up to 7or higher.
The conjugated polymers can be made by the methods disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,807,627, WO90/13148 and WO92/03490.
The thickness of the hole transporting layer is preferably 20 nm to 200 nm.
The polymers of an amino substituted aromatic compound such as polyanilines referred to above can also be used as buffer layers with or in conjunction with other hole transporting materials e.g. between the anode and the hole transporting layer. Other buffer layers can be formed of phthalocyanines such as copper phthalocyanine.
The structural formulae of some other hole transporting materials are shown in
Examples of R and/or R1 and/or R2 and/or R3 and/or R4 include aliphatic, aromatic and heterocyclic groups, alkoxy, aryloxy and carboxy groups, substituted and unsubstituted phenyl, fluorophenyl, biphenyl, naphthyl, fluorenyl, anthracenyl and phenanthrenyl groups, alkyl groups such as t-butyl, and heterocyclic groups such as carbazole.
Optionally there is a layer of an electron injecting material between the anode and the electroluminescent material layer. The electron injecting material is a material which will transport electrons when an electric current is passed through. Electron injecting materials include a metal complex such as a metal quinolate, e.g. an aluminium quinolate, lithium quinolate, zirconium quinolate (Zrq4), a cyanoanthracene such as 9,10dicyanoanthracene, cyano substituted aromatic compounds, tetracyanoquinodimethane, a polystyrene sulphonate or a compound with the structural formulae shown in
Instead of being a separate layer the electron injecting material can be mixed with the electroluminescent material and co-deposited with it.
Optionally the hole transporting material can be mixed with the electroluminescent material and co-deposited with it and the electron injecting materials and the electroluminescent materials can be mixed. The hole transporting materials, the electroluminescent materials and the electron injecting materials can be mixed together to form one layer, which simplifies the construction.
The first electrode is preferably a transparent substrate such as a conductive glass or plastic material which acts as the anode; preferred substrates are conductive glasses such as indium tin oxide coated glass, but any glass which is conductive or has a conductive layer such as a metal or conductive polymer can be used. Conductive polymers and conductive polymer coated glass or plastics materials can also be used as the substrate.
The cathode is preferably a low work function metal, e.g. aluminium, barium, calcium, lithium, rare earth metals, transition metals, magnesium and alloys thereof such as silver/magnesium alloys, rare earth metal alloys etc; aluminium is a preferred metal. A metal fluoride such as an alkali metal e.g. lithium fluoride or rare earth metal or their alloys can be used as the second electrode, for example by having a metal fluoride layer formed on a metal.
The iridium or other metal complex can be mixed with a host material.
The devices of the present invention can be used as displays in video displays, mobile telephones, portable computers and any other application where an electronically controlled visual image is used. The devices of the present invention can be used in both active and passive applications of such displays.
In known electroluminescent devices either one or both electrodes can be formed of silicon and the electroluminescent material and intervening layers of hole transporting and electron transporting materials can be formed as pixels on the silicon substrate. Preferably each pixel comprises at least one layer of an electroluminescent material and a (at least semi-) transparent electrode in contact with the organic layer on a side thereof remote from the substrate.
Preferably, the substrate is of crystalline silicon and the surface of the substrate may be polished or smoothed to produce a flat surface prior to the deposition of electrode, or electroluminescent compound. Alternatively a non-planarised silicon substrate can be coated with a layer of conducting polymer to provide a smooth, flat surface prior to deposition of further materials.
In one embodiment, each pixel comprises a metal electrode in contact with the substrate. Depending on the relative work functions of the metal and transparent electrodes, either may serve as the anode with the other constituting the cathode.
When the silicon substrate is the cathode an indium tin oxide coated glass can act as the anode and light is emitted through the anode. When the silicon substrate acts as the anode, the cathode can be formed of a transparent electrode which has a suitable work function; for example by an indium zinc oxide coated glass in which the indium zinc oxide has a low work function. The anode can have a transparent coating of a metal formed on it to give a suitable work function. These devices are sometimes referred to as top emitting devices or back emitting devices.
The metal electrode may consist of a plurality of metal layers; for example a higher work function metal such as aluminium deposited on the substrate and a lower work function metal such as calcium deposited on the higher work function metal. In another example, a further layer of conducting polymer lies on top of a stable metal such as aluminium.
Preferably, the electrode also acts as a mirror behind each pixel and is either deposited on, or sunk into, the planarised surface of the substrate. However, there may alternatively be a light absorbing black layer adjacent to the substrate.
In still another embodiment, selective regions of a bottom conducting polymer layer are made non-conducting by exposure to a suitable aqueous solution allowing formation of arrays of conducting pixel pads which serve as the bottom contacts of the pixel electrodes.
An electroluminescent device was prepared by sequentially depositing layers of the component layers on an ITO coated glass substrate.
To form the device a pre-etched ITO coated glass piece (10×10 cm2) was used. The device was fabricated by sequentially forming the layers on the ITO, by vacuum evaporation using a Solciet Machine, ULVAC Ltd. Chigacki, Japan; the active area of each pixel was 3 mm by 31 mm.
The mixed layers were formed by depositing the two materials simultaneously onto the substrate. In the examples compounds X, Y and Z are
A two-necked 250 mL round-bottomed flask fitted with a reflux condenser (with gas inlet) and a rubber septum was flushed with argon before 2-bromopyridine (2.57 mL, 27 mmol) and ethyleneglycol dimethylether (80 mL, dry and degassed) were introduced. Tetrakis(triphenylphosphine) palladium (1.0 g, 0.87 mmol) was added and the solution stirred at room temperature for 10 minutes. Benzothiophene-2-boronic acid (5.0 g, 28.1 mmol) was then added, followed by anhydrous sodium bicarbonate (8.4 g. 100 mmol) and water (50 mL, degassed). The septum was replaced with a glass stopper and the reaction mixture was heated at 80° C. for 16 hours, cooled to room temperature and the volatiles removed in vacuo. Organics were extracted with ethyl acetate (3×100 mL), washed with brine and dried over magnesium sulphate. Removal of the organics yielded a pale yellow solid. Recrystallisation from ethanol yielded a colourless solid (3.9 g, 68%, two crops), m.p. 124-6° C.
Iridium trichloride hydrate (0.97 g, 3.24 mmol) was combined with 2-benzo[b]thiophen-2-yl-pyridine (2.05 g, 9.7 mmol), dissolved in a mixture of 2-ethoxyethanol (70 mL, dried and distilled over MgSO4, degassed) and water (20 mL, degassed), and refluxed for 24 hours. The solution was cooled to room temperature and the orange precipitate collected on a glass sinter. The precipitate was washed with ethanol (60 mL, 95%), acetone (60 mL), and hexane. This was dried and used without further purification. Yield (1.5 g. 71%)
Potassium tert-butoxide (1.12 g, 10 mmol) and 2-(2-pyridyl)benzimidazole (1.95 g, 10 mmol) were added to a 200 mL Schienk tube under an inert atmosphere. 2-Ethoxyethanol (dried and distilled over magnesium sulphate, 100 mL) was added and the resultant solution stirred at ambient temperature for 10 minutes. Tetrakis[2-benzo[b]thiophen-2-yl-pyridine-C2, N′](μ-chloro) diiridium (6.0 g, 4.62 mmol) was added and the mixture refluxed under an inert atmosphere for 16 hours. On cooling to room temperature, an orange/red solid separated out. The solid was collected by filtration and washed with ethanol (3×100 mL) and diethyl ether (100 mL). After drying in vacuo the material was purified by soxhlet extraction with ethyl acetate for 24 hours. Further purification was achieved by high-vacuum sublimation (3×10−7 Torr, 400° C.). Yield (6.6 g, 89%, pre-sublimation)
Elemental Analysis:
Calc.: C, 56.56; H, 3.00; N, 8.68
Found: C, 56.41; H, 2.91; N, 8.64
A device was fabricated of structure
ITO(10 nm)/CuPc(10 nm)/α-NPB(60 nm)/Liq:Compound X (30:2) nm/BCP(6 nm)/Zrq4 (30 nm)/LiF (0.5 nm)/Al
where Compound X is thiophen-2-yl-pyridine-C2, N′]-2-(2-pyridyl)benzimidazole iridium synthesised as above, CuPc is a copper phthalocyanine buffer layer, α-NPB is as in
The coated electrodes were stored in a vacuum desiccator over a molecular sieve and phosphorous pentoxide until they were loaded into a vacuum coater Solciet Machine, ULVAC Ltd. Chigacki, Japan; the active area of each pixel was 3 mm by 3 mm, and aluminium top contacts made. The devices were then kept in a vacuum desiccator until the electroluminescence studies were performed.
The ITO electrode was always connected to the positive terminal. The current vs. voltage studies were carried out on a computer controlled Keithly 2400 source meter.
The electroluminescent properties were measured and the results are shown in
A device was constructed as in Example 2 which had the structure ITO(110 nm)/Compound Y(10 nm)/α-NPB(60 nm)/Liq:Compound X (30:2) nm/Zrq4 (30 nm)/LiF (0.5 nm)/Al
An electric current was passed through the device as in Example 2 and the properties of the emitted light measured and the results are shown in
A device was constructed as in Example 2 which had the structure ITO(110 nm n)/ZnTpTP(10 nm)/α-NPB(60 nm)/Liq:Compound X (30:2) nm/Zrq4 (30 nm)/LiF (0.5 nm)/Al
An electric current was passed through the device as in Example 1 and the properties of the emitted light measured and the results are shown in
A device was constructed as in Example 2 which had the structure ITO(110 nm)/Compound Y(10 nm)/α-NPB(60 nm)/Liq:Compound X (30:2) nm/30 nm)/LiF (0.5 nm)/Al
An electric current was passed through the device as in Example 1 and the properties of the emitted light measured and the results are shown in
A device was constructed as in Example 2 which had the structure ITO(110 nm)/ZnTpTP(10 nm)/α-NPB(60 nm)/Liq:Compound X (30:2) nm/Liq (30 nm)/LiF (0.5 nm)/Al
An electric current was passed through the device as in Example 2 and the properties of the emitted light measured and the results are shown in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2006/000441 | 2/9/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/14/2007 |