Abstract

AbstractA method of wet‐transferring a densely packed colloidal quantum dot (CQD) film is reported herein. Layers of poly(vinyl alcohol) (sacrificial layer) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (temporary mechanical support) are spin‐coated below and above the CQD film, respectively; the two layers are eventually removed, resulting in a single CQD film on an alien substrate. CQD films as large as 1 cm × 1 cm are transferred to any substrate, including flexible and prepatterned ones, with very little mechanical or optical damage. The wet‐transfer method can be repeated to form a CQD heterostructure. A CQD distributed feedback (DFB) laser is also demonstrated by transferring a thick CdSe‐based CQD layer (for both optical gain and waveguiding) on top of a surface grating structure. The resultant CQD structure exhibits a single‐mode DFB lasing action, with a high spontaneous emission factor (β ≈ 10−3), owing to a strong vertical mode confinement and smooth surface morphologies on both sides of the CQD waveguide layer.

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