“…By carefully selecting appropriate ligands, it becomes possible to achieve high luminance efficiency and create multicolor LECs. ,,,− To obtain emission at 450–650 nm, one approach consists of using either electron-withdrawing group-substituted ligands (such as F) or electron donating group-substituted ligands (such as CH 3 or OCH 3 ) showing a high-lying lowest-unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) while azole-containing moieties as the highest-occupied molecular orbital (HOMO). − It was recently shown that the replacement of the pyridine ring of C∧N ligand by the five-membered nitrogen-rich heterocyclic moiety, e.g., pyrazole, triazole, or tetrazole, gives in most cases a hypsochromically shifted PL emission due to the HOMO stabilization . According our previous work, tethering electron-withdrawing fluorine atoms onto phenylpyrazole and introducing electron-donating CH 3 moieties onto bipyridine (bpy) lead to an enhanced band gap ( E g ) and excellent performance of a maximal external quantum efficiency (EQE max ) = 4.6% in blue-green LECs. ,− In 2020, Lu et al successfully developed a yellow complex known as YIr, denoted as [Ir(bppz) 2 (Bphen)]PF 6 , using the host–guest strategy and embedding a diffusive layer, achieving a promising EQE max up to 23.7% at 565 nm, marking it as the best performance observed to date for yellow LECs . In the subsequent year, a green complex, [Ir(CF 3 -dPhTAZ) 2 (bpy)]PF 6 , which introduced by He et al achieved an EQ E max of 10.4% at 525 nm while effectively mitigating phosphorescence concentration-quenching using the C∧N ligand …”