Low-temperature OLED magnetoelectroluminescence: separating excitonic effects from carrier-pair singlet-triplet mixing
ORAL
Abstract
Magnetic field effects provide a powerful spectroscopic tool for probing charge and exciton recombination processes in OLEDs. We probe the magneto-electroluminescence (MEL) of two polymer OLEDs, with protonated and deuterated variants of the same polymer MEH-PPV, in a wide temperature range down to 1.5 K, and analyze the MEL line shapes theoretically. A narrow MEL structure is observed around zero magnetic field, between ±3 mT, which is inverted upon deuteration. As the prime effect of deuteration is the reduction of hyperfine coupling, the narrow MEL structure is assigned to the hyperfine-mediated electron-hole spin mixing. At larger fields of around ±50 mT, a broader MEL feature showing a discrete substructure is identified. The broader feature is assigned to the zero-field splitting of the triplet exciton. The resolution of the discrete substructure is enhanced by deuteration. Numerical modelling of the MEL by solving the stochastic Liouville equation in the density-matrix formalism provides excellent agreement with the experimental observations and demonstrates that the triplet excitonic feature arises from delayed fluorescence generated by triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA). The microscopic simulations reveal that TTA occurs preferentially when the axes of the two triplet excitations in the amorphous π-conjugated polymer are close to parallel to each other, providing a new insight into the underlying physics of TTA.
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Publication: Physical Review B 110, 014204 (2024)
Presenters
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Vagharsh Mkhitaryan
University of Regensburg
Authors
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Vagharsh Mkhitaryan
University of Regensburg
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Felix Braun
University of Regensburg
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Tobias Scharff
University of Regensburg
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Sebastian Bange
University of Regenaburg
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Tamim Darwish
National Deuteration Facility, ANSTO
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Paul L Burn
Centre for Organic Photonics & Electronics, School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, The University of Queensland
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John M Lupton
University of Regensburg