Blog Post Image: Nuclear Spins Control Current in Plastic LED

An organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, glows orange when electrical current flows through it. University of Utah physicists used this kind of OLED – basically a plastic LED instead of a conventional silicon semiconductor LED – to show that they could read the subatomic “spins” in the center or nuclei of hydrogen isotopes and use those spins to control current to the OLED. It is a step toward “spintronic” devices such as faster computers, better data storage and more efficient OLEDS for TV, computer and cell phone displays. Photo Credit: Andy Brimhall, University of Utah Marketing and Communications

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