1995
DOI: 10.1016/0379-6779(94)02301-e
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Majority carrier injection from ITO anodes into organic light-emitting diodes based upon polymer blends

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Cited by 77 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Metal-organic contacts in organic LEDs have been reported to be ohmic [6] or contact limited with charge injection by a combination of tunneling and thermionic emission [7,8]. The electrical injection properties of the metalorganic contact dominate organic device performance and reliability [9].…”
Section: Metal-polymer Contactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Metal-organic contacts in organic LEDs have been reported to be ohmic [6] or contact limited with charge injection by a combination of tunneling and thermionic emission [7,8]. The electrical injection properties of the metalorganic contact dominate organic device performance and reliability [9].…”
Section: Metal-polymer Contactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(4) at high electric fields and the barrier heights derived from ln(j/F 2 ) v. F À1 plots correlated reasonably well with barrier values estimated on the basis of workfunctions. The temperature independence of the injection current observed in systems with large barrier for hole injection lent further support to the concept [33]. At lower fields deviations from FNbehavior are usually noted, though, and currents become temperature-activated, suggesting that at lower fields thermionic emission prevails.…”
Section: à3mentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Following Vestweber et al [9], we first have considered the thermionic emission model, which takes Richardson-Schottky emission into account. In this model, tunnelling through barriers is ignored, while field-induced barrier lowering is considered, and the current density at a field (F) is given by [9] J AT 2 exp Àf À bF 1=2 =kT ;…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%