4.8 Article

Direct Photo-Patterning of Efficient and Stable Quantum Dot Light- Emitting Diodes via Light-Triggered, Carbocation-Enabled Ligand Stripping

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c00146

Keywords

quantum dots; photopatterning; light-emitting diodes; photochemistry; ligand chemistry

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Researchers report a new method called light-triggered, carbocation-enabled ligand stripping (CELS) to pattern quantum dot light-emitting diodes (QLEDs) with high efficiency and stability. This method shows promising results for building high-performance QLED displays and related integrated devices.
Next generation displays based on quantum dot light-emitting diodes (QLEDs) require robust patterning methods for quantum dot layers. However, existing patterning methods mostly yield QLEDs with performance far inferior to the state-of-the-art individual devices. Here, we report a light-triggered, carbocation-enabled ligand stripping (CELS) approach to pattern QLEDs with high efficiency and stability. During CELS, photogenerated carbocations from triphenylmethyl chlorides remove native ligands of quantum dots, thereby producing patterns at microscale precision. Chloride anions passivate surface defects and endow patterned quantum dots with preserved photoluminescent quantum yields. It works for both cadmium-based and heavy-metal-free quantum dots. CELS-patterned QLEDs show remarkable external quantum efficiencies (19.1%, 17.5%, 12.0% for red, green, blue, respectively) and a long operation lifetime (T95 at 1000 nits up to 8700 h). Both are among the highest for patterned QLEDs and approach the records for nonpatterned devices, which makes CELS promising for building high-performance QLED displays and related integrated devices.

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