| Literature DB >> 27877957 |
Tho Duc Nguyen1, Yugang Sheng1, James E Rybicki1, Markus Wohlgenannt1.
Abstract
We present magnetoconductivity and magnetoluminescence measurements in sandwich devices made from films of a π-conjugated molecule and demonstrate effects of more than 30 and 50% magnitude, respectively, in fields of 100 mT at room-temperature. It has previously been recognized that the effect is caused by hyperfine coupling, and that it is phenomenologically similar to other magnetic field effects that act on electron-hole pairs, which are well-known in spin-chemistry. However, we show that the very large magnitude of the effect contradicts present knowledge of the electron-hole pair recombination processes in electroluminescent π-conjugated molecules, and that the effect persists even in almost hole-only devices. Therefore, this effect is likely caused by the interaction of radical pairs of equal charge.Entities:
Keywords: hyperfine coupling; magnetic field effect; organic magnetoresistance; radical pair mechanism
Year: 2008 PMID: 27877957 PMCID: PMC5099714 DOI: 10.1088/1468-6996/9/2/024206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090