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1.
Science ; 345(6203): 1487-90, 2014 Sep 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25237097

ABSTRACT

The effects of external magnetic fields on the electrical conductivity of organic semiconductors have been attributed to hyperfine coupling of the spins of the charge carriers and hydrogen nuclei. We studied this coupling directly by implementation of pulsed electrically detected nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). The data revealed a fingerprint of the isotope (protium or deuterium) involved in the coherent spin precession observed in spin-echo envelope modulation. Furthermore, resonant control of the electric current by nuclear spin orientation was achieved with radiofrequency pulses in a double-resonance scheme, implying current control on energy scales one-millionth the magnitude of the thermal energy.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 104(1): 017601, 2010 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366393

ABSTRACT

Organic semiconductors offer a unique environment to probe the hyperfine coupling of electronic spins to a nuclear spin bath. We explore the interaction of spins in electron-hole pairs in the presence of inhomogeneous hyperfine fields by monitoring the modulation of the current through an organic light emitting diode under coherent spin-resonant excitation. At weak driving fields, only one of the two spins in the pair precesses. As the driving field exceeds the difference in local hyperfine field experienced by electron and hole, both spins precess, leading to pronounced spin beating in the transient Rabi flopping of the current. We use this effect to measure the magnitude and spatial variation in hyperfine field on the scale of single carrier pairs, as required for evaluating models of organic magnetoresistance, improving organic spintronics devices, and illuminating spin decoherence mechanisms.

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