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Improving Charge Injection via a Blade-Coating Molybdenum Oxide Layer: Toward High-Performance Large-Area Quantum-Dot Light-Emitting Diodes.

Qunying ZengZhongwei XuCongxiu ZhengYang LiuWei ChenTailiang GuoFushan LiChaoyu XiangYixing YangWeiran CaoXiangwei XieXiaolin YanLei QianPaul H Holloway
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
A solution-processed molybdenum oxide (MoO x) as the hole injection layer (HIL) by doctor-blade coating was developed to improve the efficiency and lifetime of red-emitting quantum-dot light-emitting diodes (QD-LEDs). It has been demonstrated that by adding isopropyl alcohol into the MoO x precursor during the doctor-blade coating process, the morphology, composition, and the surface electronic structure of the MoO x HIL could be tailored. A high-quality MoO x film with optimized charge injection was obtained, based on which all-solution-processed highly efficient red-emitting QD-LEDs were realized by using a low-cost doctor-blade coating technique under ambient conditions. The red QD-LEDs exhibited the maximum current efficiency and external quantum efficiency of 16 cd/A and 15.1%, respectively. Moreover, the lifetime of red devices initializing at 100 cd/m2 was 3236 h under ambient conditions, which is about twice as long as those with a conventional poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)-poly(styrenesulfonate) HIL. Large-area QD-LEDs with 4 in. emitting areas were fabricated with blade coating as well, which exhibit a high efficiency of 12.1 cd/A for red emissions. Our work paves a new way to the realization of efficient large-area QD-LEDs, and the processing and findings from this work can be expanded into next-generation lighting and flat-panel displays.
Keyphrases
  • light emitting
  • highly efficient
  • low cost
  • high efficiency
  • air pollution
  • quantum dots
  • particulate matter
  • ultrasound guided
  • energy transfer
  • fluorescent probe
  • molecular dynamics
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals