various hybrid devices have been developed for real-world applications. The preparation process of hybrid devices, however, usually involves vast variety of materials, which not only increases the cost but also makes the process more cumbersome. Thus, there emerges the need to explore multifunctional organic electronic materials to simplify the preparation process and reduce the cost. Spiro-fused polycyclic aromatic compounds, with orthogonal π-subsystems linked by a sp 3-hybridized spiro-atom, have been extensively explored as organic electronic materials due to rigid 3D orthogonal configuration, good processability, excellent thermal and optical stability, and exclusive spiroconjugation effects. [4-7] Spiroconjugation, first described by Simmons and Fukunaga in 1967, refers to the delocalization and bandgap alteration that occurs upon orbital interaction between the π systems of the two spiro-fused planar pieces. [8] The unique 3D rigid spiroconjugation architecture not only reduces intermolecular electronic coupling and in turn the charge recombination but also increases charge transport capability. [9] Notably, 9,9′-spirobifluorene, the most prominent class of The synthesis of a new molecule, SFIC-Cl, is reported, which features enhanced π-electron delocalization by spiroconjugation and narrowed bandgap by chlorination. SFIC-Cl is integrated into a single-crystal transistor (OFET) and organic light-emitting diode (OLED). The material demonstrates remarkable transport abilities across various solution-processed OFETs and retains efficient radiance in a near-infrared OLED emitting light at 700 nm. Furthermore, the intermolecular multi-dimensional connection of SFIC-Cl enables the fabrication of a single-component large-area (2 × 2 cm 2) near-infrared OLED by spin-coating. The SFIC-Cl-acceptor-based solar cell shows excellent power conversion efficiency of 10.16% resulting from the broadened and strong absorption and well-matched energy levels. The study demonstrates that chlorinated spiroconjugated fused systems offer a novel direction toward the development of high-performance organic semiconductor materials for hybrid organic electronic devices.