Shikha Madan, Jitender Kumar, Devinder Madhwal, Inderpreet Singh, Pramod Bhatnagar, Parmatma Mathur
Journal of Nanophotonics, Vol. 5, Issue 01, 053518, (January 2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3604001
TOPICS: Organic light emitting diodes, Polymers, Electroluminescence, Composites, Excitons, Absorption, Quantum dots, Electrons, Metals, Nanocrystals
A polymer light emitting diode (PLED) based on poly[2-methoxy-5-(2′-ethyl-hexyloxy)-1,4-phenylene vinylene]:CdSe/ZnS core shell uncapped quantum dots (QDs) was fabricated. It was observed that the presence of QDs in the polymer tunes the emission spectrum of the PLED as their QDs concentration increases to 10% w/w and above. It was also found that the QDs present in the polymer improved the PLED luminance by ∼20 times at a typical current density of 75 mA/cm2. This was attributed to the suppression of nonradiative electrostatic energy transfer from excitons to the metallic cathode due to the insertion of a high dielectric constant QD layer. Also, the presence of QDs layer between the active layer and the cathode shifts the recombination zone away from the cathode. This reduces the diffusion of radiative excitons into the metal electrode.