Solid-state light-emitting devices based on direct-bandgap semiconductors have, over the past two decades, been utilized as energy-efficient sources of lighting. However, fabrication of these devices typically relies on expensive high-temperature and high-vacuum processes, rendering them uneconomical for use in large-area displays. Here, we report high-brightness light-emitting diodes based on solution-processed organometal halide perovskites. We demonstrate electroluminescence in the near-infrared, green and red by tuning the halide compositions in the perovskite. In our infrared device, a thin 15 nm layer of CH3NH3PbI(3-x)Cl(x) perovskite emitter is sandwiched between larger-bandgap titanium dioxide (TiO2) and poly(9,9'-dioctylfluorene) (F8) layers, effectively confining electrons and holes in the perovskite layer for radiative recombination. We report an infrared radiance of 13.2 W sr(-1) m(-2) at a current density of 363 mA cm(-2), with highest external and internal quantum efficiencies of 0.76% and 3.4%, respectively. In our green light-emitting device with an ITO/PEDOT:PSS/CH3NH3PbBr3/F8/Ca/Ag structure, we achieved a luminance of 364 cd m(-2) at a current density of 123 mA cm(-2), giving external and internal quantum efficiencies of 0.1% and 0.4%, respectively. We show, using photoluminescence studies, that radiative bimolecular recombination is dominant at higher excitation densities. Hence, the quantum efficiencies of the perovskite light-emitting diodes increase at higher current densities. This demonstration of effective perovskite electroluminescence offers scope for developing this unique class of materials into efficient and colour-tunable light emitters for low-cost display, lighting and optical communication applications.
The study of the photophysical properties of organic-metallic lead halide perovskites, which demonstrate excellent photovoltaic performance in devices with electron- and hole-accepting layers, helps to understand their charge photogeneration and recombination mechanism and unravels their potential for other optoelectronic applications. We report surprisingly high photoluminescence (PL) quantum efficiencies, up to 70%, in these solution-processed crystalline films. We find that photoexcitation in the pristine CH3NH3PbI3-xClx perovskite results in free charge carrier formation within 1 ps and that these free charge carriers undergo bimolecular recombination on time scales of 10s to 100s of ns. To exemplify the high luminescence yield of the CH3NH3PbI3-xClx perovskite, we construct and demonstrate the operation of an optically pumped vertical cavity laser comprising a layer of perovskite between a dielectric mirror and evaporated gold top mirrors. These long carrier lifetimes together with exceptionally high luminescence yield are unprecedented in such simply prepared inorganic semiconductors, and we note that these properties are ideally suited for photovoltaic diode operation.
Colloidal gels are a prototypical example of a heterogeneous network solid whose complex properties are governed by thermally-activated dynamics. In this Letter we experimentally establish the connection between the intermittent dynamics of individual particles and their local connectivity. We interpret our experiments with a model that describes single-particle dynamics based on highly cooperative thermal debonding. The model, in quantitative agreement with experiments, provides a microscopic picture for the structural origin of dynamical heterogeneity in colloidal gels and sheds new light on the link between structure and the complex mechanics of these heterogeneous solids.Attractive interactions can drive a dilute colloidal suspension towards a solid state formed by a samplespanning and mechanically-rigid particle network [1,2]. These colloidal gels are non-equilibrium solids, kinetically arrested en route to their equilibrium state of solidliquid coexistence [3]. Such particle gels are characterized by strong heterogeneity in their local connectivity, mesoscopic structure and their dynamics and mechanics [4][5][6][7]. The microstructure and internal dynamics of colloidal gels can be directly observed with microscopy techniques at the single-particle level. As a consequence, it forms an interesting testing ground to explore the complex and length-scale dependent mechanics of heterogeneous solids. Colloidal gels derive their mechanical rigidity from physically bonded gel strands and nodes that form a percolating elastic network. The linear elasticity of gels is governed by the mechanics of the network architecture and its thermal fluctuations [8,9]. By contrast, the gradual aging of gels to a denser state [1,10] and their non-linear response to applied stresses [11,12], is governed by events occuring at the the much smaller length scale of individual particles. Since the bonds between the particles are typically weak, single particles can debond from strands in the gel by thermally-activated bond breaking [13]. On longer time scales, this result in the gradual restructuration of the gel network, causing it to coarsen, age and relax internal stresses that are built up during gelation [14]. Moreover, thermal-activation at the single particle level plays a crucial role in processes of fatigue that preempt stress-induced failure of the gel network [11]. To date, quantitative descriptions of these thermally-activated phenomena have relied on mean-field approximations [13]. Yet, the inhomogeneity in local coordination that is intrinsic to gels, must play a large role in the intermittent debonding dynamics that are at the origin of this complex non-linear behavior. As a result, linking the structure of colloidal gels to their non-linear mechanics has remained challenging, in particular as the relationship between local connectivity and thermallyactivated dynamics of single particles is not clearly established.In this letter we explore the connection between the local connectivity and intermittent bonding-debonding dy...
We study the effect of larger substitutional impurities on the structure of soft microgel crystals. At the size ratio we employ, r small /r large ¼ 0.67, we observe the unexpected co-crystallisation of the large impurities with the base crystal, at low fractions of impurity particles. A single impurity takes the place of 4 tetrahedrally coordinated small particles within the lattice. However, as this is accompanied by local deformations of the particles, this distortion-minimizing structure transforms into a random surrounding of the impurity particle at higher fractions of large substitutional impurities. The distortions in the lattice become longer ranged through this transformation, and ultimately result in vitrification of the sample.
The dynamics of interstitial dopants govern the properties of a wide variety of doped crystalline materials. To describe the hopping dynamics of such interstitial impurities, classical approaches often assume that dopant particles do not interact and travel through a static potential energy landscape. Here we show, using computer simulations, how these assumptions and the resulting predictions from classical Eyring-type theories break down in entropically stabilized body-centered cubic (BCC) crystals due to the thermal excitations of the crystalline matrix. Deviations are particularly severe close to melting where the lattice becomes weak and dopant dynamics exhibit strongly localized and heterogeneous dynamics. We attribute these anomalies to the failure of both assumptions underlying the classical description: (i) The instantaneous potential field experienced by dopants becomes largely disordered due to thermal fluctuations and (ii) elastic interactions cause strong dopant-dopant interactions even at low doping fractions. These results illustrate how describing nonclassical dopant dynamics requires taking the effective disordered potential energy landscape of strongly excited crystals and dopantdopant interactions into account.anomalous dynamics | doping | crystals D oping pure crystalline solids with small amounts of interstitial impurities is a widely used method to enhance material properties such as heat and electric conductivity (1-4) or to tailor mechanical properties (5). Prototypical examples include the introduction of carbon atoms in iron crystals to make steel or the doping of plastic crystals with Li ions to create solid-state batteries (4). To ensure longevity of doped materials, it is essential that the spatial homogeneity and transport dynamics of the dopants within the crystal are well controlled and understood. Although theories and models are abundant (5-11), it remains unclear how large thermal excitations of the matrix lattice affect the dynamics of dopants. This becomes of particular interest during the processing of doped crystals, where they are heated close to or beyond their melting point. For example in body-centered cubic (BCC) iron doped with carbon, significant deviations from the exponential increase of diffusivity with temperature, expected from Arrhenius' law, are observed close to the melting temperature where lattice excitations are strong (12). Whereas doping is typically performed to tailor material properties at the macroscopic scale, these enhanced properties emerge from the dynamics and interactions between dopants at the scale of individual atoms (13). In classical theories for dopant dynamics, impurity particles are described as hopping through a potential energy landscape that is set by a perfect lattice symmetry, with transition rates governed by the energy barriers between adjacent interstitial sites and their occupancy (6,7,14). In reality, thermal fluctuations of atoms away from their equilibrium lattice positions will randomize the instantaneous potential energy l...
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