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Bipolar-shell resurfacing for blue LEDs based on strongly confined perovskite quantum dots

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Colloidal quantum dot (QD) solids are emerging semiconductors that have been actively explored in fundamental studies of charge transport 1 and for applications in optoelectronics 2 . Forming high-quality QD… Click to show full abstract

Colloidal quantum dot (QD) solids are emerging semiconductors that have been actively explored in fundamental studies of charge transport 1 and for applications in optoelectronics 2 . Forming high-quality QD solids—necessary for device fabrication—requires substitution of the long organic ligands used for synthesis with short ligands that provide increased QD coupling and improved charge transport 3 . However, in perovskite QDs, the polar solvents used to carry out the ligand exchange decompose the highly ionic perovskites 4 . Here we report perovskite QD resurfacing to achieve a bipolar shell consisting of an inner anion shell, and an outer shell comprised of cations and polar solvent molecules. The outer shell is electrostatically adsorbed to the negatively charged inner shell. This approach produces strongly confined perovskite QD solids that feature improved carrier mobility (≥0.01 cm 2  V −1  s −1 ) and reduced trap density relative to previously reported low-dimensional perovskites. Blue-emitting QD films exhibit photoluminescence quantum yields exceeding 90%. By exploiting the improved mobility, we have been able to fabricate CsPbBr 3 QD-based efficient blue and green light-emitting diodes. Blue devices with reduced trap density have an external quantum efficiency of 12.3%; the green devices achieve an external quantum efficiency of 22%. A solution-based ligand-exchange strategy enables the realization of close-packed quantum dot solid films with near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield and high charge carrier mobility.

Keywords: quantum; bipolar shell; shell; shell resurfacing; strongly confined; confined perovskite

Journal Title: Nature Nanotechnology
Year Published: 2020

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