Circularly polarised electroluminescence from chiral excitons in vacuum-sublimed supramolecular semiconductor thin films
Rituparno Chowdhury, Marco D. Preuss, Hwan-Hee Cho, Joshua J. P. Thompson, Samarpita Sen, Tomi Baikie, Pratyush Ghosh, Yorrick Boeije, Xian-Wei Chua, Kai-Wei Chang, Erjuan Guo, Joost van der Tol, Bart W. L. van den Bersselaar, Andrea Taddeucci, Nicolas Daub, Daphne M. Dekker

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the creation of chiral supramolecular thin films exhibiting circularly polarized electroluminescence, with high efficiency and dissymmetry, through a novel co-sublimation process involving a chiral molecule and a host material.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for fabricating chiral thin films with strong CP luminescence using co-sublimation and nano-phase segregation, enabling high-performance organic LEDs.
Findings
Achieved up to 16% external quantum efficiency in CP OLEDs.
Observed dissymmetry of electroluminescence above 10%.
Demonstrated in-situ chiral crystallization in thin films.
Abstract
Materials with chiral electronic structures are of great interest. We report a triazatruxene, TAT, molecular semiconductor with chiral alkyl side chains that crystallises from solution to form chirally-stacked columns with a helical pitch of 6 TATs (2.3 nm). These crystals show strong circularly polarised, CP, green photoluminescence, with dissymmetry of 24%. Electronic structure calculations using the full crystal structure, show that this chiral stacking associates angular momentum to the valence and conduction states and thus gives rise to the observed CP luminescence. Free-standing crystals are not useful for active semiconductor devices, but we have discovered that co-sublimation of TAT as the guest in a structurally mismatched host enables the fabrication of thin films where the chiral crystallization is achieved in-situ by thermally-triggered nano-phase segregation of dopant and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Surface Chemistry and Catalysis
