Just how common is deuterium (and tritium)? Not very. Naturally occurring abundance of the three isotopes of hydrogen are as follows:
99.98% protium
0.016% deuterium
<0.01% tritium
Tritium is, in fact, unstable (hence its role in hydrogen bombs) which is why it’s pretty rare. But deuterium is also quite low, even though it is stable. Only about one in every 6000+ hydrogen atoms contain that extra neutron which make it deuterium. This fact will come in handy later for trivia night (ok, unlikely, but it will come in handy later in this piece).
So what in the world does deuterium have to do with OLEDs?
As it turns out, deuterium has been studied as an OLED component for over a decade now in both host and emitter materials. Even before this, deuterium has been used for decades to study what is called the “isotope effect” on chemical reactions. Basically, chemists can use deuterium atoms in place of hydrogen to study how this changes things like reaction kinetics (aka speed of a reaction). Molecules that normally contain a hydrogen atom bonded to carbon (C-H) will have faster kinetics than the same molecule where the H is replace by D (C-D). Essentially a C-D bond is harder to break compared to a C-H bond, so C-D will react slower (or require higher temperature).
If you are a fellow chemist nerd like me who want to geek-out on kinetic isotope effects you can read more here.
Importantly, changing out H for D does not change electronic states, only kinetics, so things like emission wavelengths and energy levels should remain unchanged when dealing with OLED materials.
A shining (published) example of deuterium being used in and OLED devices from 2014 showed a dramatic 5x increase in lifetime when deuterium is used. In this example deuterium was used in the host, and it was intentionally placed in a location on the molecule where the degradation mechanism was known to occur. Their data showed it would be even better if CH3 could replace H (>20x increase in lifetime) but that is not always realistic as the molecules would start to change at an electronic level.