| Literature DB >> 33225543 |
Zhuangzhuang Ma1, Zhifeng Shi1, Dongwen Yang1, Yawen Li2, Fei Zhang1, Lintao Wang1, Xu Chen1, Di Wu1, Yongtao Tian1, Yu Zhang3, Lijun Zhang2, Xinjian Li1, Chongxin Shan1.
Abstract
White light-emitting diodes (WLEDs) are promising next-generation solid-state light sources. However, the commercialization route for WLED production suffers from challenges in terms of insufficient color-rendering index (CRI), color instability, and incorporation of rare-earth elements. Herein, a new two-component strategy is developed by assembling two broadband emissive materials with self-trapped excitons (STEs) for high CRI and stable WLEDs. The strategy addresses effectively the challenging issues facing current WLEDs. Based on first-principles thermodynamic calculations, copper-based ternary halides composites, CsCu2 I3 @Cs3 Cu2 I5 , are synthesized by a facile one-step solution approach. The composites exhibit an ideal white-light emission with a cold/warm white-light tuning and a robust stability against heat, ultraviolet light, and environmental oxygen/moisture. A series of cold/warm tunable WLEDs is demonstrated with a maximum luminance of 145 cd m-2 and an external quantum efficiency of 0.15%, and a record high CRI of 91.6 is achieved, which is the highest value for lead-free WLEDs. Importantly, the fabricated device demonstrates an excellent operation stability in a continuous current mode, exhibiting a long half-lifetime of 238.5 min. The results promise the use of the hybrids of STEs-derived broadband emissive materials for high-performance WLEDs.Entities:
Keywords: color-rendering index; copper-based halides; self-trapped excitons; stability; white light-emitting diodes
Year: 2020 PMID: 33225543 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202001367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849