Considering a strict global environmental regulation,
fluorescent
quantum dots (QDs) as key visible emitters in the next-generation
display field should be compositionally non-Cd. When compared to green
and red emitters obtainable from size-controlled InP QDs, development
of non-Cd blue QDs remains stagnant. Herein, we explore the synthesis
of non-Cd, ZnSe-based QDs with binary and ternary compositions toward
blue photoluminescence (PL). First, the size increment of binary ZnSe
QDs is attempted by a multiply repeated growth until blue PL is attained.
Although this approach offers a relevant blue color, excessively large-sized
ZnSe QDs inevitably entail a low PL quantum yield. As an alternative
strategy to the above size enlargement, the alloying of high-band
gap ZnSe with lower-band gap ZnTe in QD synthesis is carried out.
These alloyed ternary ZnSeTe QDs after ZnS shelling exhibit a systematically
tunable PL of 422–500 nm as a function of Te/Se ratio. Analogous
to the state-of-the-art heterostructure of InP QDs with a double-shelling
scheme, an inner shell of ZnSe is newly inserted with different thicknesses
prior to an outer shell of ZnS, where the effects of the thickness
of ZnSe inner shell on PL properties are examined. Double-shelled
ZnSeTe/ZnSe/ZnS QDs with an optimal thickness of the ZnSe inner shell
are then employed for all-solution-processed fabrication of a blue
QD light-emitting diode (QLED). The present blue QLED as the first
ZnSeTe QD-based device yields a peak luminance of 1195 cd/m2, a current efficiency of 2.4 cd/A, and an external quantum efficiency
of 4.2%, corresponding to the record values reported from non-Cd blue
devices.
Silica embedding strategy enabling a nearly full PL retention of the original QY of InP QDs is proposed for the realization of a highly efficient, robust QD-LED platform.
Using unconventionally formed silica composites embedded with both green and red InP/ZnSeS/ZnS QDs, an operation-stable, on-chip-packaged white light-emitting diode is demonstrated.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.