Circularly polarized electroluminescence from a single-crystal organic microcavity light-emitting diode based on photonic spin-orbit interactions
Jichao Jia, Xue Cao, Xuekai Ma, Jianbo De, Jiannian Yao, Stefan, Schumacher, Qing Liao, Hongbing Fu

TL;DR
This paper reports a novel chiral-emitter-free microcavity CP-OLED that uses photonic spin-orbit interactions in a 2D organic single crystal, achieving high dissymmetry and luminance for advanced display technologies.
Contribution
The study introduces a new design for CP-OLEDs utilizing photonic spin-orbit interactions in a 2D organic microcavity without chiral emitters, achieving high performance.
Findings
Achieved a high dissymmetry factor (gEL) of 1.1.
Maximum luminance of about 60000 cd/m2.
Demonstrated controllable spin-splitting via photonic SOI.
Abstract
Circularly polarized (CP) electroluminescence from organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) has aroused considerable attention for their potential in future display and photonic technologies. The development of CP-OLEDs relies largely on chiral-emitters, which not only remain rare owing to difficulties in design and synthesis but also limit the performance of electroluminescence. When the polarization (pseudospin) degrees of freedom of a photon interact with its orbital angular momentum, photonic spin-orbit interaction (SOI) emerges such as Rashba-Dresselhaus (RD) effect. Here, we demonstrate a chiral-emitter-free microcavity CP-OLED with a high dissymmetry factor (gEL) and high luminance by embedding a thin two-dimensional organic single crystal (2D-OSC) between two silver layers which serve as two metallic mirrors forming a microcavity and meanwhile also as two electrodes in an OLED…
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