Journal of Flexible and Printed Electronics
Korea Flexible & Printed Electronics Society
Review Article

Mechanisms of Negative Capacitance in Organic Light-Emitting Diodes: A Review

Byeongyun Kim1, Donghyun Ko1, Jaesang Lee1,*
1Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Inter-University Semiconductor Research Center, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea.
*Corresponding Author: Jaesang Lee, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Inter-University Semiconductor Research Center, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea, Republic of. E-mail: jsanglee@snu.ac.kr.

© Copyright 2026 Korea Flexible & Printed Electronics Society. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received: Dec 21, 2025; Revised: Feb 06, 2026; Accepted: Jun 04, 2026

Published Online: Jun 24, 2026

Abstract

Negative capacitance (NC) in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) has emerged as a sensitive probe of non-equilibrium charge dynamics, yet its physical origin remains under active debate. This review provides a comprehensive overview of NC in OLEDs, focusing on how it arises from delayed and imbalanced charge responses under electrical modulation. We first summarize how NC manifests in capacitance–voltage, capacitance–frequency, Nyquist, and Bode representations, and outline the theoretical frameworks used to extract capacitance from impedance and transient spectroscopy measurements. We then examine the microscopic mechanisms proposed to account for NC. Under bipolar operation, NC originates from processes in which charge removal lags behind voltage modulation, including Langevin and trap-assisted recombination, asymmetric hole and electron injection, delayed release of space charge at organic–organic interfaces, and dispersive transport induced by energetic disorder. Although distinct in origin, these mechanisms share a common physical principle: internal charge redistribution cannot follow the applied voltage instantaneously, resulting in an inductive-like response with a negative incremental capacitance. NC under unipolar operation is also discussed, where self-heating has been identified as a dominant contribution arising from the mismatch between fast electronic transport and slow thermal relaxation. Finally, we highlight open questions and future research directions, emphasizing the need for carefully designed unipolar devices and combined frequency- and time-domain approaches to disentangle thermal and electronic effects. This review establishes NC as a powerful diagnostic tool for probing slow charge dynamics and interfacial processes in OLEDs and related organic semiconductor devices.

Keywords: Negative Capacitance; OLEDs; Charge Recombination; Energetic Disorder; Interfacial Charge Accumulation; Self Heating