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Feel the heat: Nonlinear electrothermal feedback in organic LEDs

2013, Fischer, Axel, Koprucki, Thomas, Gärtner, Klaus, Tietze, Max L., Brückner, Jacqueline, Lüssem, Björn, Leo, Karl, Glitzky, Annegret, Scholz, Reinhard

For lighting applications, Organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) need much higher brightness than for displays, leading to self-heating. Due to the temperature-activated transport in organic semiconductors, this can result in brightness inhomogeneities and catastrophic failure. Here, we show that due to the strong electrothermal feedback of OLEDs, the common spatial current and voltage distribution is completely changed, requiring advanced device modeling and operation concepts. Our study clearly demonstrates the effect of negative differential resistance (NDR) in OLEDs induced by self-heating. As a consequence, for increasing voltage, regions with declining voltages are propagating through the device, and even more interestingly, a part of these regions show even decreasing currents, leading to strong local variation in luminance. The expected breakthrough of OLED lighting technology will require an improved price performance ratio, and the realization of modules with very high brightness but untainted appearance is considered to be an essential step into this direction. Thus, a deeper understanding of the control of electrothermal feedback will help to make OLEDs in lighting more competitive.

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Self-heating, bistability, and thermal switching in organic semiconductors

2012, Fischer, Axel, Pahner, Paul, Lüssem, Björn, Scholz, Reinhard, Koprucki, Thomas, Gärtner, Klaus, Glitzky, Annegret

We demonstrate electric bistability induced by the positive feedback of self-heating onto the thermally activated conductivity in a two-terminal device based on the organic semiconductor C60. The central undoped layer with a thickness of 200 nm is embedded between thinner n-doped layers adjacent to the contacts minimizing injection barriers. The observed current-voltage characteristics follow the general theory for thermistors described by an Arrhenius-like conductivity law. Our findings including hysteresis phenomena are of general relevance for the entire material class since most organic semiconductors can be described by a thermally activated conductivity.

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Self-heating effects in organic semiconductor devices enhanced by positive temperature feedback

2012, Fischer, Axel, Pahner, Paul, Lüssem, Björn, Leo, Karl, Scholz, Reinhard, Koprucki, Thomas, Fuhrmann, Jürgen, Gärtner, Klaus, Glitzky, Annegret

We studied the influence of heating effects in an organic device containing a layer sequence of n-doped / intrinsic / n-doped C60 between crossbar metal electrodes. A strong positive feedback between current and temperature occurs at high current densities beyond 100 A/cm2, as predicted by the extended Gaussian disorder model (EGDM) applicable to organic semiconductors. These devices give a perfect setting for studying the heat transport at high power densities because C60 can withstand temperatures above 200ʿ C. Infrared images of the device and detailed numerical simulations of the heat transport demonstrate that the electrical circuit produces a superposition of a homogeneous power dissipation in the active volume and strong heat sources localized at the contact edges ...