| Literature DB >> 33896935 |
Alessandro Minotto1, Paul A Haigh2,3, Łukasz G Łukasiewicz4, Eugenio Lunedei5, Daniel T Gryko6, Izzat Darwazeh7, Franco Cacialli8.
Abstract
Visible light communication (VLC) is a wireless technology that relies on optical intensity modulation and is potentially a game changer for internet-of-things (IoT) connectivity. However, VLC is hindered by the low penetration depth of visible light in non-transparent media. One solution is to extend operation into the "nearly (in)visible" near-infrared (NIR, 700-1000 nm) region, thus also enabling VLC in photonic bio-applications, considering the biological tissue NIR semitransparency, while conveniently retaining vestigial red emission to help check the link operativity by simple eye inspection. Here, we report new far-red/NIR organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) with a 650-800 nm emission range and external quantum efficiencies among the highest reported in this spectral range (>2.7%, with maximum radiance and luminance of 3.5 mW/cm2 and 260 cd/m2, respectively). With these OLEDs, we then demonstrate a "real-time" VLC setup achieving a data rate of 2.2 Mb/s, which satisfies the requirements for IoT and biosensing applications. These are the highest rates ever reported for an online unequalised VLC link based on solution-processed OLEDs.Year: 2020 PMID: 33896935 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-020-0314-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782