Many white light sources are described as having a "color temperature", a practice that has been termed the "Kelvin myth", since, in general, only incandescent light-emitters have a spectral distribution which closely approximates that of a black-body curve. We show that the white light emitted, via exciplex formation, from blends of two blue-emitting organic materials, has the same spectral form as black-body light, as perceived by the human eye. The color temperature is tunable, depending on the relative concentrations of the two materials. This suggests that organics could provide a white light source with a tunable, true, color temperature.

An organic solution to the Kelvin myth? White light with true color temperature via exciplex formation

MAZZEO, MARCO;GIGLI, Giuseppe;
2003-01-01

Abstract

Many white light sources are described as having a "color temperature", a practice that has been termed the "Kelvin myth", since, in general, only incandescent light-emitters have a spectral distribution which closely approximates that of a black-body curve. We show that the white light emitted, via exciplex formation, from blends of two blue-emitting organic materials, has the same spectral form as black-body light, as perceived by the human eye. The color temperature is tunable, depending on the relative concentrations of the two materials. This suggests that organics could provide a white light source with a tunable, true, color temperature.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11587/374474
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