Spectrally Tunable White Light-Emitting Diodes Based on Carbon Quantum Dot-Doped Poly(N-vinylcarbazole) Composites
Özet
Electroluminescent white light-emitting diodes (WLEDs) are always of
great interest for emerging display applications. Carbon-based quantum dots (CQDs) are
the newest emerging nanoscale materials that can be employed for this purpose, owing to
their broad and bright light emission properties. In the present work, highly luminescent
CQDs with an emission quantum yield of 60% were prepared via a colloidal solvothermal
method and subsequent silica gel column chromatography. The photoluminescence (PL)
peak was located at 550 nm possessing yellow emission, with a full width at halfmaximum of 98 nm and a relatively long lifetime of 10.23 ns through a single-exponential
recombination pathway. CQDs were employed in an electroluminescent device
architecture of an ITO/PEDOT:PSS/TFB/CQD:PVK/TPBi/LiF/Al structure and
blended with poly(N-vinylcarbazole) (PVK) to evaluate their ability to reach white
electroluminescent emission. Results confirmed a high external quantum efficiency
(EQE) of 0.76% and a maximum luminescence of 774.3 cd·m−2
. Tuning the ratio
between CQDs and PVK from 1:10.25 to 1:5.75 resulted in a systematic shift in CIE x−y coordinates from 0.23−0.26 to 0.21−0.24,
located close to the cool white region. The results of the present study can be considered a step forward in fabricating efficient
WLEDs based on low-cost CQDs.
Kaynak
ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALSCilt
7Sayı
3Bağlantı
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.3c04915?urlappend=%3Fref%3DPDF&jav=VoR&rel=cite-ashttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12573/1959