We report the development of coplanar green colour organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) based on asymmetric nanogap electrodes fabricated on different substrates including glass and plastic. Using adhesion lithography (a-Lith) we pattern Al and Au layers acting as the cathode and anode electrodes, respectively, separated by an inter-electrode distance of <15 nm with an aspect ratio of up to 10 6 . Spin-coating the organic light-emitting polymer poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-alt-bithiophene) (F8T2) on top of the asymmetric Al-Au nanogap electrodes results in green light-emitting nanogap OLEDs with promising operating characteristics. We show that the scaling of the OLED's width from 4 to 200 mm can substantially improve the light output of the device without any adverse effects on the manufacturing yield. Furthermore, it is found that the light-emitting properties in the nanogap area differ from the bulk organic film, an effect attributed to confinement of the conjugated polymer chains in the nanogap channel. These results render a-Lith particularly attractive for low cost facile fabrication of nanoscale light-emitting sources and arrays on different substrates of arbitrary size.Nanometer-sized polymer light-emitting diodes (n-PLEDs) have been proposed as light sources in subwavelength scanning near-field optical microscopes as well as in nanoscale photo-patterning to create simultaneously a large number of identical patterns [1,2]. Their unique advantages are colour tunability, versatility in geometrical pattern selection and ease of manufacturing of nanostructured arrays using low cost solution processing on substrates of arbitrary size and shape [3]. From an operational standpoint, miniaturised light-emitting diodes are advantageous to larger area ones, as higher current densities can be sustained thanks to efficient dissipation of Joule heating [4,5]. Indeed a suppression of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) rolloff characteristics has been observed upon narrowing the current injection/transport area down to 50 nm [6]. These developments led to demonstration of low threshold amplified spontaneous emission in light-emitting polymer films [7], which could pave the way to the realisation of electrically pumped organic lasers [8]. Further progress has, however, been hindered by manufacturing challenges, as shadow masking and conventional photolithography cannot produce nanometer-sized electrode feature between different metals, and e-beam lithography is not suitable for upscale while it is often limited to a single electrode material. We have recently introduced adhesion lithography (a-Lith) technique as a viable alternative for the scalable sub-15 nm patterning of asymmetric, i.e. of different work function, coplanar metal electrodes on large area flexible substrates [9]. The asymmetric nature of the electrodes, which is difficult to obtain with other common nanopatterning techniques, allows for a range of electronic nanogap devices to be created via simply depositing a single layer of active material on top of d...