| Literature DB >> 29116150 |
Yeonsang Park1, Jineun Kim1, Kyung-Sang Cho1, Hyochul Kim1, Min-Kyung Lee1, Jae-Soong Lee1, Un Jeong Kim1, Sung Woo Hwang1, Mark L Brongersma2, Young-Geun Roh3, Q-Han Park4.
Abstract
The ability of metasurfaces to manipulate light at the subwavelength scale offers unprecedented functionalities for passive and active lasing devices. However, applications of metasurfaces to optical devices are rare due to fabrication difficulties. Here, we present quantum dot light emitting diodes (QDLEDs) with a metasurface-integrated metal electrode and demonstrate microscopically controlled LED emission. By incorporating slot-groove antennas into the metal electrode, we show that LED emission from randomly polarized QD sources can be polarized and directed at will. Utilizing the relation between polarization and emission direction, we also demonstrate microscopic LED beam splitting through the selective choice of polarization.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29116150 PMCID: PMC5677004 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15254-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Light emitting diode with metasurface electrode. (a) Schematic of the colloidal quantum dot light emitting diode (CQD LED) with metasurface-integrated electrode. (b) Band diagram of the CQD LED. EF is the Fermi energy level, HTL is a hole transport layer and ETL is an electron transport layer. Each number corresponds to the work function of the material. (c) Left: schematic illustration of device with pixelated four directional metasurfaces in top view. Right: Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of fabricated device in top view. The white bar corresponds to 1000 nm.
Figure 2Polarized and directional radiation from the slot-groove unit. (a) Schematic top (top) and side view (bottom) of slot-groove unit structure. L (D) denotes length (distance) of groove structure (incident light shown as red arrow). (b) Contour map of phase difference between slot and groove. The black line corresponds to a phase of π/2. (c) Measured electroluminescence (EL) spectrum of LED. The red (blue) spectrum is measured with x- (y-) polarizer. The black line is an EL spectrum of the conventional LED. (d) Measured Fourier-space image of LED with slot-groove for rightward deflection. The EL intensity in Fourier-space image was normalized by the maximum intensity. The white bar in the SEM image corresponds to 200 nm.
Figure 3Intensity of LED emission with different spacing of slot-groove elements. (a) Schematics of optical and Fourier-space image measurement setup. (b) The SEM images correspond to fabricated slot-groove array samples with 1000 nm, 800 nm, 500 nm, and 400 nm spacing. The white bar in the SEM image corresponds to 1000 nm. Measured optical and Fourier-space images of EL emission are shown in second and third row respectively. The scale bar in Fourier-space images shows the intensity normalized by its maximum. (c) Slot-area-normalized intensity of each sample with different spacing.
Figure 4Polarized directional emission from metasurface electrode light emitting diode. (a) SEM images of 4-directional slot-groove unit (Left) and measured optical image of EL from LED with pixelated metasurface for 4-directional emission. (Right) The white bar in SEM images corresponds to 1000 nm. The optical image was measured without a polarizer. (b) Measured optical images with a directional polarizer. Red (blue) arrow shows the direction of x- (y-) polarizer in each optical image. (c) Measured Fourier-space images of EL from LED with pixelated metasurface for 4-directional emission. The scale bar shows the normalized intensity. (d) ϕ-polar plots of measured Fourier-space images.
Figure 5LED beam splitting by selective polarization. (a) Schematics of polarization beam splitter using metasurface. (b) SEM images of slot-groove arrays with 500 nm spacing for two-orthogonal directions. Measured optical image without a polarizer is shown in right figure. The white line in SEM image corresponds to 1000 nm. (c) By changing the direction of polarizer from x-axis to y-axis, the direction of LED emission is changed from left-wards to down-wards. The scale bar shows the normalized intensity.