Abstract

In terms of tunable luminescence and high quantum efficiency, colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising semiconductors for constructing near-infrared light-emitting diodes (NIR-LEDs). However, currently available NIR-LEDs are susceptible to variations in the emission layer thickness (EMLT), the highest external quantum efficiency (EQE) decreases to below 50% (relative to peak EQE) when the EMLT varies out of a narrow range of (±30 nm). This is due to the thickness-dependent carrier recombination rate and current density variation, resulting in batch-to-batch EQE fluctuations that limit LED reproducibility. Here we report efficient NIR-LEDs that exhibit EQE variations of less than 15% (relative to the champion EQE) over an EMLT range of 40–220 nm; the highest achievable EQE of ∼11.5% was obtained by encapsulating a 212 nm-thick CQD within a type-I inorganic shell to enhance the radiative recombination in the dots, resulting in a high photoluminescence quantum yield of 80%, and by post-treating the films with a bifunctional linking agent to improve and balance the hole and electron mobilities in the entire film (electron mobility: 8.23 × 10−3 cm2 V−1 s−1; hole mobility: 7.0 × 10−3 cm2 V−1 s−1). This work presents the first NIR-LEDs that exhibit EMLT-invariant EQE over an EMLT range of 40–220 nm, which represents the highest EQE among reported CQD NIR-LEDs with a QD thickness exceeding 100 nm.

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