| Literature DB >> 30080977 |
Dengbao Han, Muhammad Imran1, Mengjiao Zhang, Shuai Chang, Xian-Gang Wu, Xin Zhang, Jialun Tang, Mingshan Wang2, Shmshad Ali, Xinguo Li3, Gang Yu3, Junbo Han2, Lingxue Wang, Bingsuo Zou, Haizheng Zhong.
Abstract
In this paper, we reported the in situ fabrication of highly luminescent formamidinium lead bromide (FAPbBr3) nanocrystal thin films by dropping toluene as an anti-solvent during the spin-coating with a perovskite precursor solution using 3,3-diphenylpropylamine bromide (DPPA-Br) as a ligand. The resulting films are uniform and composed of 5-20 nm FAPbBr3 perovskite nanocrystals. By monitoring the solvent mixing of anti-solvent and precursor solution on the substrates, we illustrated the difference between the ligand-assisted reprecipitation (LARP) process and the nanocrystal-pinning (NCP) process. This understanding provides a guideline for film optimization, and the optimized films obtained through the in situ LARP process exhibit strong photoluminescence emission at 528 nm, with quantum yields up to 78% and an average photoluminescence lifetime of 12.7 ns. In addition, an exciton binding energy of 57.5 meV was derived from the temperature-dependent photoluminescence measurement. More importantly, we achieved highly efficient pure green perovskite based light-emitting diode (PeLEDs) devices with an average external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 7.3% (maximum EQE is 16.3%) and an average current efficiency (CE) of 29.5 cd A-1 (maximum CE is 66.3 cd A-1) by adapting a conventional device structure of ITO/PEDOT:PSS/TFB/perovskite film/TPBi/LiF/Al. It is expected that the in situ LARP process provides an effective methodology for the improvement of the performance of PeLEDs.Entities:
Keywords: in situ fabrication; light-emitting diode; perovskite nanocrystals; photoluminescence; quantum dots
Year: 2018 PMID: 30080977 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b05172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881