Bisinfotech Magazine February 2018

Page 31

LED

Quantum Dots Hold LEDs ‘Bright’ Future

Researchers have been studying quantum dots in order to find a low-energy means of reproducing light in every color visible to the human eye and at a very bright luminescence. Given the success of the research, the quantum dots should provide the basis for a new generation of light-emitting diodes. Making lights to last for longer and remain bright is an important backdrop for the development of many modern LED technologies. A type of quantum dot could well hold the answer to improving LEDs with quantum dots. An international research team led by ETH Zurich and IBM Research Zurich is working on a technology - a class of nanocrystals that have the ability to shine a range of very bright colors. The nanocrystals are formed from caesium lead halide compounds. One reason for the crustal properties is due to the molecular arrangement; here the crystals are arranged in a perovskite lattice structure. This enables the researchers to alter the emission wavelength by tuning both size and composition of nanoparticles. Part of the special properties of the quantum dots comes down to the nanocrystals emitting light very quickly. The caesium lead halide quantum dots are capable of emitting light at room temperature after just one nanosecond. Lead researcher Professor Maksym Kovalenko managed to create the nanocrystals from semiconductor material. Speaking with his university's website, the scientist states: “These tiny crystals have proved to be extremely bright and fast emitting light sources, brighter and faster than any other type of quantum dot studied so far.” He goes onto explain how, by varying the composition of the chemical elements and the size of the nanoparticles, the researchers succeeded in producing a range of nanocrystals that can light up each of the colors across the visible spectrum. The quantum dots can be controlled through the application of photons, used to excite semiconductor nanocrystals in an array. This forces an electron leaves its original place in the crystal lattice, leaving behind a hole. Illumination can also be controlled, since under given conditions, an electron hole pair is unable to revert to its energy ground state and therefore the light emission is suppressed and occurs delayed. The research has been reported to the journal Nature. The research paper is titled “Bright triplet excitons in caesium lead halide perovskites.” The primary application of the quantum dots will be with a next generation of light-emitting diodes for larger displays.

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