| Literature DB >> 15943439 |
Alexander H Mueller1, Melissa A Petruska, Marc Achermann, Donald J Werder, Elshan A Akhadov, Daniel D Koleske, Mark A Hoffbauer, Victor I Klimov.
Abstract
Numerous technologies including solid-state lighting, displays, and traffic signals can benefit from efficient, color-selectable light sources that are driven electrically. Semiconductor nanocrystals are attractive types of chromophores that combine size-controlled emission colors and high emission efficiencies with excellent photostability and chemical flexibility. Applications of nanocrystals in light-emitting technologies, however, have been significantly hindered by difficulties in achieving direct electrical injection of carriers. Here we report the first successful demonstration of electroluminescence from an all-inorganic, nanocrystal-based architecture in which semiconductor nanocrystals are incorporated into a p-n junction formed from GaN injection layers. The critical step in the fabrication of these nanocrystal/GaN hybrid structures is the use of a novel deposition technique, energetic neutral atom beam lithography/epitaxy, that allows for the encapsulation of nanocrystals within a GaN matrix without adversely affecting either the nanocrystal integrity or its luminescence properties. We demonstrate electroluminescence (injection efficiencies of at least 1%) in both single- and two-color regimes using structures comprising either a single monolayer or a bilayer of nanocrystals.Mesh:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15943439 DOI: 10.1021/nl050384x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189