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  1. Abstract

    Light‐emitting diodes (LEDs) are a lighting technology with a huge and ascending market. Typically, LED backlights are often paired with inorganic phosphors made from rare‐earth elements (REEs) to tune the emission lineshapes for different applications. However, REE production is a resource‐intensive process with many negative environmental impacts. Herein organic hybrid LEDs are developed using organic dyes synthesized from an abundant and non‐toxic natural product (theobromine) to replace REE phosphors. The resulted hybrid LED generates continuous emission from 400–740 nm, resulting in a high color rendering index (the current industry standard) of 90 and a color fidelity index (the most advanced and comprehensive standard) of 92, challenging commercial LEDs based on REE phosphors. In addition, the light‐converting composite is made from 99 wt% SBS, an inexpensive industrial polymer, and 1 wt% theobromine dyes, reducing the cost of the light converter to ¢1.30 for a 1 W LED, compared to approximately ¢ 19.2 of commercial products. The light converting efficiency of the dye‐SBS composite is 82%. Excited state kinetics experiments are also conducted to provide guidance to further increase the light‐converting efficiency of the theobromine dyes while maintaining excellent color rendering and fidelity.

     
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Organic hybrid light-emitting diodes (hybrid-LEDs) employ organic dyes as light converters on top of commercial blue inorganic LEDs, replacing incumbent inorganic phosphor light converters synthesized from rare-earth and/or toxic metallic elements to optimize device environmental sustainability. Here, we present two naturally derived organic dyes for hybrid-LEDs, highlighting stability and efficiency enhancement based on a novel “acceptor–acceptor” molecular design. This “acceptor–acceptor” skeleton comprises theobromine and thiadiazole, two electron-withdrawing groups that lower energy levels and suppress photooxidation. This differentiates these dyes from the widely adopted “donor–acceptor” skeleton, where photooxidation is facilitated by the presence of electron-donating units. Simultaneously, sidechains on organic dyes used to enhance solution processability, crucial for film transparency, introduce an additional photooxidation pathway. With this “acceptor–acceptor” skeleton, the destabilization from sidechains was offset by the stability enhancement from the electronic effects in the backbone. When blended within an industrial polymer, poly(styrene-butadiene-styrene) (SBS), their enhanced solubility enables the formation of highly transparent films, crucial for reducing scattering loss in LEDs. Furthermore, resultant dye-SBS films achieved photoluminescence quantum yields (PLQYs) of around 90% under ambient conditions. Taking advantage of their transparency and solution processability, we fabricated a waveguide with this theobromine-dye-SBS composite, which was subsequentially assembled into an edge-lit LED device of no glare and enhanced aesthetics. 
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