| Literature DB >> 26031416 |
Fengjia Fan1, Pongsakorn Kanjanaboos1, Mayuran Saravanapavanantham1, Eric Beauregard1, Grayson Ingram1, Emre Yassitepe1, Michael M Adachi1, Oleksandr Voznyy1, Andrew K Johnston1, Grant Walters1, Gi-Hwan Kim1, Zheng-Hong Lu1, Edward H Sargent1.
Abstract
Colloidal nanoplatelets, quasi-two-dimensional quantum wells, have recently been introduced as colloidal semiconductor materials with the narrowest known photoluminescence line width (∼10 nm). Unfortunately, these materials have not been shown to have continuously tunable emission but rather emit at discrete wavelengths that depend strictly on atomic-layer thickness. Herein, we report a new synthesis approach that overcomes this issue: by alloying CdSe colloidal nanoplatelets with CdS, we finely tune the emission spectrum while still leveraging atomic-scale thickness control. We proceed to demonstrate light-emitting diodes with sub-bandgap turn-on voltages (2.1 V for a device emitting at 2.4 eV) and the narrowest electroluminescence spectrum (FWHM ∼12.5 nm) reported for colloidal semiconductor LEDs.Entities:
Keywords: CdSe1−xSx; alloying; colloidal nanoplatelets; electroluminescence; solution-processed light-emitting diodes
Year: 2015 PMID: 26031416 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b01233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189