Floquet spin states in OLEDs.
S JamaliV V MkhitaryanHans MalissaA NahlawiH PopliT GrünbaumSebastian BangeS MilsterD M StoltzfusA E LeungT A DarwishPaul L BurnJohn M LuptonC BoehmePublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Electron and hole spins in organic light-emitting diodes constitute prototypical two-level systems for the exploration of the ultrastrong-drive regime of light-matter interactions. Floquet solutions to the time-dependent Hamiltonian of pairs of electron and hole spins reveal that, under non-perturbative resonant drive, when spin-Rabi frequencies become comparable to the Larmor frequencies, hybrid light-matter states emerge that enable dipole-forbidden multi-quantum transitions at integer and fractional g-factors. To probe these phenomena experimentally, we develop an electrically detected magnetic-resonance experiment supporting oscillating driving fields comparable in amplitude to the static field defining the Zeeman splitting; and an organic semiconductor characterized by minimal local hyperfine fields allowing the non-perturbative light-matter interactions to be resolved. The experimental confirmation of the predicted Floquet states under strong-drive conditions demonstrates the presence of hybrid light-matter spin excitations at room temperature. These dressed states are insensitive to power broadening, display Bloch-Siegert-like shifts, and are suggestive of long spin coherence times, implying potential applicability for quantum sensing.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- magnetic resonance
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics
- solar cells
- density functional theory
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single molecule
- computed tomography
- energy transfer
- single cell
- perovskite solar cells
- quantum dots
- living cells
- water soluble
- fluorescent probe
- functional connectivity
- transition metal
- monte carlo