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Bio-Inspired Pangolin Design for Self-Healable Flexible Perovskite Light-Emitting Diodes.

Xiaoyan QianYang ShenLiu-Jiang ZhangMinglei GuoXiao-Yi CaiYu LuHuimin LiuYe-Fan ZhangYanqing TangLi ChenYingyi TangJingkun WangWei ZhouXing-Yu GaoHongYing MaoYanqing LiJian-Xin TangShuit-Tong Lee
Published in: ACS nano (2022)
Despite tremendous developments in the luminescene performance of perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs), the brittle nature of perovskite crystals and their poor crystallinity on flexible substrates inevitably lead to inferior performance. Inspired by pangolins' combination of rigid scales and soft flesh, we propose a bionic structure design for self-healing flexible PeLEDs by employing a polymer-assisted crystal regulation method with a soft elastomer of diphenylmethane diisocyanate polyurethane (MDI-PU). The crystallinity and flexural strain resistance of such perovskite films on plastics with silver-nanowire-based flexible transparent electrodes are highly enhanced. The detrimental cracks induced during repeated deformation can be effectively self-healed under heat treatment via intramolecular/intermolecular hydrogen bonds with MDI-PU. Upon collective optimization of the perovskite films and device architecture, the blue-emitting flexible PeLEDs can achieve a record external quantum efficiency of 13.5% and high resistance to flexural strain, which retain 87.8 and 80.7% of their initial efficiency after repeated bending and twisting operations of 2000 cycles, respectively.
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