Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1264452 Organic Electronics 2007 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Surface plasmon–polariton (SPP) modes may act as significant loss channels in organic light-emitting diode devices. We present experimental data illustrating that by the introduction of an appropriately scaled microstructure into a device, some of this lost power may be recovered as light. It is shown that in order to maximize this SPP-mediated light emission in a top-emitting light-emitting diode (TOLED) the plasmon modes associated with the two metal surfaces of the cathode must be coupled together. Data from grating-coupled and index-coupled SPP schemes are presented, and we show that photoluminescence emission from a structure containing a microstructured thin metal film that supports coupled SPPs is at least 50 times more effective than a similar planar structure. Experimental data is also presented from a structure containing a thin metal film whose profile contains a wavelength scale microstructure on a single interface. These data suggest that such a device geometry has the potential to increase the efficiency of top-emitting organic light-emitting devices.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Chemistry (General)
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