Floquet spin states in OLEDs

Weakly spin-orbit coupled electron and hole spins in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) constitute near-perfect two-level systems to explore the interaction of light and matter in the ultrastrong-drive regime. Under such highly non-perturbative conditions, the frequency at which the spin oscillat...

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Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Jamali, S, Mkhitaryan, V V, Malissa, H, Nahlawi, A, Popli, H, Grünbaum, T, Bange, S, Milster, S, Stoltzfus, D, Leung, A E, Darwish, T A, Burn, P L, Lupton, J M, Boehme, C
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 05.10.2020
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Summary:Weakly spin-orbit coupled electron and hole spins in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) constitute near-perfect two-level systems to explore the interaction of light and matter in the ultrastrong-drive regime. Under such highly non-perturbative conditions, the frequency at which the spin oscillates between states, the Rabi frequency, becomes comparable to its natural resonance frequency, the Larmor frequency. For such conditions, we develop an intuitive understanding of the emergence of hybrid light-matter states, illustrating how dipole-forbidden multiple-quantum transitions at integer and fractional g-factors arise. A rigorous theoretical treatment of the phenomena comes from a Floquet-style solution to the time-dependent Hamiltonian of the electron-hole spin pair under resonant drive. To probe these phenomena experimentally requires both the development of a magnetic-resonance setup capable of supporting oscillating driving fields comparable in magnitude to the static field defining the Zeeman splitting; and an organic semiconductor which is characterized by minimal inhomogeneous broadening so as to allow the non-linear light-matter interactions to be resolved. The predicted exotic resonance features associated with the Floquet states are indeed found experimentally in measurements of spin-dependent steady-state OLED current under resonant drive, demonstrating that complex hybrid light-matter spin excitations can be formed and probed at room temperature. The spin-Dicke state arising under strong drive is insensitive to power broadening so that the Bloch-Siegert shift of the resonance becomes apparent, implying long coherence times of the dressed spin state with potential applicability for quantum sensing.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2010.02170