3 research outputs found
High Circular Polarization of Electroluminescence Achieved via Self-Assembly of a Light-Emitting Chiral Conjugated Polymer into Multidomain Cholesteric Films.
We demonstrate a facile route to obtain high and broad-band circular polarization of electroluminescence in single-layer polymer OLEDs. As a light-emitting material we use a donor-acceptor polyfluorene with enantiomerically pure chiral side-chains. We show that upon thermal annealing the polymer self-assembles into a multidomain cholesteric film. By varying the thickness of the polymer emitting layer, we achieve high levels of circular polarization of electroluminescence (up to 40% excess of right-handed polarization), which are the highest reported for polymer OLEDs not using chiral dopants or alignment layers. Mueller matrix ellipsometry shows strong optical anisotropies in the film, indicating that the circular polarization of luminescence arises mainly after the photon has been generated, through selective scattering and birefringence correlated in the direction of the initial linear polarization of the photon. Our work demonstrates that chirally substituted conjugated polymers can combine photonic and semiconducting properties in advanced optoelectronic devices
High circular polarization of electroluminescence achieved via self-assembly of a light-emitting chiral conjugated Polymer into multidomain cholesteric films
\u3cp\u3eWe demonstrate a facile route to obtain high and broad-band circular polarization of electroluminescence in single-layer polymer OLEDs. As a light-emitting material we use a donor-acceptor polyfluorene with enantiomerically pure chiral side-chains. We show that upon thermal annealing the polymer self-assembles into a multidomain cholesteric film. By varying the thickness of the polymer emitting layer, we achieve high levels of circular polarization of electroluminescence (up to 40% excess of right-handed polarization), which are the highest reported for polymer OLEDs not using chiral dopants or alignment layers. Mueller matrix ellipsometry shows strong optical anisotropies in the film, indicating that the circular polarization of luminescence arises mainly after the photon has been generated, through selective scattering and birefringence correlated in the direction of the initial linear polarization of the photon. Our work demonstrates that chirally substituted conjugated polymers can combine photonic and semiconducting properties in advanced optoelectronic devices.\u3c/p\u3
High Circular Polarization of Electroluminescence Achieved <i>via</i> Self-Assembly of a Light-Emitting Chiral Conjugated Polymer into Multidomain Cholesteric Films
We demonstrate a
facile route to obtain high and broad-band circular
polarization of electroluminescence in single-layer polymer OLEDs.
As a light-emitting material we use a donor–acceptor polyfluorene
with enantiomerically pure chiral side-chains. We show that upon thermal
annealing the polymer self-assembles into a multidomain cholesteric
film. By varying the thickness of the polymer emitting layer, we achieve
high levels of circular polarization of electroluminescence (up to
40% excess of right-handed polarization), which are the highest reported
for polymer OLEDs not using chiral dopants or alignment layers. Mueller
matrix ellipsometry shows strong optical anisotropies in the film,
indicating that the circular polarization of luminescence arises mainly
after the photon has been generated, through selective scattering
and birefringence correlated in the direction of the initial linear
polarization of the photon. Our work demonstrates that chirally substituted
conjugated polymers can combine photonic and semiconducting properties
in advanced optoelectronic devices