Nickel Oxide Hole Injection Layers for Balanced Charge Injection in Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Diodes.
Haoyue WanEui Dae JungTong ZhuSo Min ParkJoao M PinaPan XiaKoen BertensYa-Kun WangOzan AtanHaijie ChenYi HouSeungjin LeeYu-Ho WonKwang-Hee KimSjoerd HooglandEdward H SargentPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Quantum dot (QD) light-emitting diodes (QLEDs) are promising for next-generation displays, but suffer from carrier imbalance arising from lower hole injection compared to electron injection. A defect engineering strategy is reported to tackle transport limitations in nickel oxide-based inorganic hole-injection layers (HILs) and find that hole injection is able to enhance in high-performance InP QLEDs using the newly designed material. Through optoelectronic simulations, how the electronic properties of NiO x affect hole injection efficiency into an InP QD layer, finding that efficient hole injection depends on lowering the hole injection barrier and enhancing the acceptor density of NiO x is explored. Li doping and oxygen enriching are identified as effective strategies to control intrinsic and extrinsic defects in NiO x , thereby increasing acceptor density, as evidenced by density functional theory calculations and experimental validation. With fine-tuned inorganic HIL, InP QLEDs exhibit a luminance of 45 200 cd m -2 and an external quantum efficiency of 19.9%, surpassing previous inorganic HIL-based QLEDs. This study provides a path to designing inorganic materials for more efficient and sustainable lighting and display technologies.