Direct linearly polarized electroluminescence from perovskite nanoplatelet superlattices

Polarized light is critical for a wide range of applications, but is usually generated by filtering unpolarized light, which leads to substantial energy losses and requires additional optics. Here we demonstrate the direct emission of linearly polarized light from light-emitting diodes made of CsPbI...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature photonics 2024-06, Vol.18 (6), p.586-594
Hauptverfasser: Ye, Junzhi, Ren, Aobo, Dai, Linjie, Baikie, Tomi K., Guo, Renjun, Pal, Debapriya, Gorgon, Sebastian, Heger, Julian E., Huang, Junyang, Sun, Yuqi, Arul, Rakesh, Grimaldi, Gianluca, Zhang, Kaiwen, Shamsi, Javad, Huang, Yi-Teng, Wang, Hao, Wu, Jiang, Koenderink, A. Femius, Torrente Murciano, Laura, Schwartzkopf, Matthias, Roth, Stephen V., Müller-Buschbaum, Peter, Baumberg, Jeremy J., Stranks, Samuel D., Greenham, Neil C., Polavarapu, Lakshminarayana, Zhang, Wei, Rao, Akshay, Hoye, Robert L. Z.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Polarized light is critical for a wide range of applications, but is usually generated by filtering unpolarized light, which leads to substantial energy losses and requires additional optics. Here we demonstrate the direct emission of linearly polarized light from light-emitting diodes made of CsPbI 3 perovskite nanoplatelet superlattices. The use of solvents with different vapour pressures enables the self-assembly of the nanoplatelets with fine control over their orientation (either face-up or edge-up) and therefore their transition dipole moment. As a result of the highly uniform alignment of the nanoplatelets, as well as their strong quantum and dielectric confinement, large exciton fine-structure splitting is achieved at the film level, leading to pure red light-emitting diodes with linearly polarized electroluminescence exhibiting a high degree of polarization of 74.4% without any photonic structures. This work demonstrates the potential of perovskite nanoplatelets as a promising source of linearly polarized light, opening up the development of next-generation three-dimensional displays and optical communications from a highly versatile, solution-processable system. Self-assembled perovskite nanoplatelets emit linearly polarized light, enabling the realization of red perovskite light-emitting diodes with a 74.4% degree of linear polarization.
ISSN:1749-4885
1749-4893
DOI:10.1038/s41566-024-01398-y