Nanoscale Engineering Boosts Performance of Quantum Dot Light Emitting Diodes
Oct. 25, 2013 — Dramatic
advances in the field of quantum dot light emitting diodes (QD-LEDs)
could come from recent work by the Nanotechnology and Advanced
Spectroscopy team at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
The quantum
dot device structure shown with a transmission electron microscopy
(TEM) image of a cross-section of a real device. (Credit: Image courtesy
of DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Quantum dots are nano-sized semiconductor particles whose emission
color can be tuned by simply changing their dimensions. They feature
near-unity emission quantum yields and narrow emission bands, which
result in excellent color purity. The new research aims to improve
QD-LEDs by using a new generation of engineered quantum dots tailored
specifically to have reduced wasteful charge-carrier interactions that
compete with the production of light.
"QD-LEDs can potentially provide many advantages over standard
lighting technologies, such as incandescent bulbs, especially in the
areas of efficiency, operating lifetime and the color quality of the
emitted light," said Victor Klimov of Los Alamos.
Incandescent bulbs, known for converting only 10 percent of
electrical energy into light and losing 90 percent of it to heat, are
rapidly being replaced worldwide by less wasteful fluorescent light
sources. However, the most efficient approach to lighting is direct
conversion of electricity into light using electroluminescent devices
such as LEDs.
Due to spectrally narrow, tunable emission, and ease of processing,
colloidal QDs are attractive materials for LED technologies. In the last
decade, vigorous research in QD-LEDs has led to dramatic improvements
in their performance, to the point where it nearly meets the
requirements for commercial products. One outstanding challenge in the
field is the so-called efficiency roll-off (known also as "droop"), that
is, the drop in efficiency at high currents.
"This 'droop' problem complicates achieving practical levels of
brightness required especially for lighting applications," said Wan Ki
Bae, a postdoctoral researcher on the nanotech team.
By conducting spectroscopic studies on operational QD-LEDs, the Los
Alamos researchers have established that the main factor responsible for
the reduction in efficiency is an effect called Auger recombination. In
this process, instead of being emitted as a photon, the energy from
recombination of an excited electron and hole is transferred to the
excess charge and subsequently dissipated as heat.
A paper, "Controlling the influence of Auger recombination on the
performance of quantum-dot light-emitting diodes" is being published
Oct. 25 in Nature Communications. In addition, an overview
article on the field of quantum-dot light-emitting diodes and
specifically the role of Auger effects appeared in the September Materials Research Society Bulletin, Volume 38, Issue 09, also authored by researchers of the Los Alamos nanotech team.
Not only has this work identified the mechanism for efficiency losses
in QD-LEDs, Klimov said, but it has also demonstrated two different
nano-engineering strategies for circumventing the problem in QD-LEDs
based on bright quantum dots made of cadmium selenide cores overcoated
with cadmium sulfide shells.
The first approach is to reduce the efficiency of Auger recombination
itself, which can be done by incorporating a thin layer of cadmium
selenide sulfide alloy at the core/shell interface of each quantum dot.
The other approach attacks the problem of charge imbalance by better
controlling the flow of extra electrons into the dots themselves. This
can be accomplished by coating each dot in a thin layer of zinc cadmium
sulfide, which selectively impedes electron injection. According to
Jeffrey Pietryga, a chemist in the nanotech team, "This fine tuning of
electron and hole injection currents helps maintain the dots in a
charge-neutral state and thus prevents activation of Auger
recombination."
These studies were funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science.
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