Improved quantum efficiency for electroluminescence in semiconducting polymers
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 397 (6718) , 414-417
- https://doi.org/10.1038/17087
Abstract
Some conjugated polymers have luminescence properties that are potentially useful for applications such as light-emitting diodes, whose performance is ultimately limited by the maximum quantum efficiency theoretically attainable for electroluminescence, ,. If the lowest-energy excited states are strongly bound excitons (electron-hole pairs in singlet or triplet spin states), this theoretical upper limit is only 25% of the corresponding quantum efficiency for photoluminescence: an electron in the π*-band and a hole (or missing electron) in the π-band can form a triplet with spin multiplicity of three, or a singlet with spin multiplicity of one, but only the singlet will decay radiatively. But if the electron-hole binding energy is sufficiently weak, the ratio of the maximum quantum efficiencies for electroluminescence and photoluminescence can theoretically approach unity. Here we report a value of ∼50% for the ratio of these efficiencies (electroluminescence:photoluminescence) in polymer light-emitting diodes, attained by blending electron transport materials with the conjugated polymer to improve the injection of electrons. This value significantly exceeds the theoretical limit for strongly bound singlet and triplet excitons, assuming they comprise the lowest-energy excited states. Our results imply that the exciton binding energy is weak, or that singlet bound states are formed with higher probability than triplets.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Polymer light-emitting diodes with polyethylene dioxythiophene–polystyrene sulfonate as the transparent anodeSynthetic Metals, 1997
- Soluble polypyrrole as the transparent anode in polymer light-emitting diodesSynthetic Metals, 1996
- Direct Measurement of Conjugated Polymer Electronic Excitation Energies Using Metal/Polymer/Metal StructuresPhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Calcium electrodes in polymer LEDsSynthetic Metals, 1995
- Enhanced performance of polymer light-emitting diodes using high-surface area polyaniline network electrodesJournal of Applied Physics, 1995
- Electrochemistry and electrogenerated chemiluminescence of films of the conjugated polymer 4-methoxy-(2-ethylhexoxyl)-2,5-polyphenylenevinyleneChemical Physics Letters, 1994
- Carrier tunneling and device characteristics in polymer light-emitting diodesJournal of Applied Physics, 1994
- Conjugated polymer electroluminescenceSynthetic Metals, 1993
- Visible light emission from semiconducting polymer diodesApplied Physics Letters, 1991
- Light-emitting diodes based on conjugated polymersNature, 1990