Raymond F. Boyce, Donald D. Chamberlin, et al.
CACM
We present an overview of the current status of our work on scanning-tunneling-microscope-based (STM) spectroscopy and electroluminescence (EL) excitation to study the physical and electronic structure of organic materials used in organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs). By these means we probe the critical device parameters in charge-carrier injection and transport, i.e., the height of the barrier for charge-carrier injection at interfaces between different materials and the energy gap between positive and negative polaronic states. In combination with optical absorption measurements, we gauge the exciton binding energy, a parameter that determines energy transport and EL efficiency. In STM experiments involving organic EL excitation, the tip functions as an OLED electrode in a highly localized fashion, allowing one to map the spatial distribution of the EL intensity across thin-film samples with nanometer lateral resolution as well as to measure the local EL emission spectra and the influence of thin-film morphology.
Raymond F. Boyce, Donald D. Chamberlin, et al.
CACM
Ehud Altman, Kenneth R. Brown, et al.
PRX Quantum
Khalid Abdulla, Andrew Wirth, et al.
ICIAfS 2014
Yun Mao, Hani Jamjoom, et al.
CoNEXT 2006