Electron correlation effects in electron-hole recombination in organic light-emitting diodes
K. Tandon, S. Ramasesha, S. Mazumdar

TL;DR
This paper presents a new theoretical approach to electron-hole recombination in organic LEDs, revealing how molecular structure influences exciton yields and aligning with experimental observations.
Contribution
The authors develop a time-dependent theoretical framework that accurately predicts exciton yields in organic LEDs, differing from previous models by considering long-range interactions and molecular specifics.
Findings
Singlet exciton yield exceeds 25% in polymers
Yield increases with oligomer chain length
Nitrogen heteroatoms reduce singlet exciton yield
Abstract
We develop a general theory of electron--hole recombination in organic light emitting diodes that leads to formation of emissive singlet excitons and nonemissive triplet excitons. We briefly review other existing theories and show how our approach is substantively different from these theories. Using an exact time-dependent approach to the interchain/intermolecular charge-transfer within a long-range interacting model we find that, (i) the relative yield of the singlet exciton in polymers is considerably larger than the 25% predicted from statistical considerations, (ii) the singlet exciton yield increases with chain length in oligomers, and, (iii) in small molecules containing nitrogen heteroatoms, the relative yield of the singlet exciton is considerably smaller and may be even close to 25%. The above results are independent of whether or not the bond-charge repulsion, X_perp, is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrganic Light-Emitting Diodes Research · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics
