January 09, 2024
By Jade Liu, IMEC
Perovskite LEDs, a thousand times
brighter than OLEDs
Transparent perovskite light emitting
diodes on sapphire substrate with scaled emission area for injection
of ultrahigh current densities. Credit: IMEC
Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) have
revolutionized modern lighting and sensing technology. From
applications in our homes to industry, LEDs are used for all lighting
applications, from indoor lighting over TV screens to biomedicine.
Widely used organic LEDs (OLEDs) today, for example in smartphone
screens, employ organic thin-film materials as a semiconductor.
However, their maximum brightness remains limited; just think of
trying to read your smartphone screen on a very sunny day.
Meanwhile, perovskites—a class of materials
with a specific crystal structure—are proving their worth beyond
solar cells. With excellent optoelectrical properties, low-cost
processability and efficient charge transport, these materials have
emerged in the last 10 years as interesting candidates for light
emission applications, such as LEDs.
However, while perovskites can withstand very
high current densities,
laser
operation with the emission of high-intensity coherent light has not
been reached yet. "In the ULTRA-LUX project, imec showed for the first
time a PeLED architecture with low optical losses and pumped these
PeLEDs to current densities that support the stimulated emission of
light," explained Prof. Paul Heremans, who is an imec senior fellow
and principal investigator of the project.
The project is detailed
published
in Nature Photonics, titled "Electrically assisted amplified
spontaneous emission in perovskite
light-emitting diodes."
"This novel architecture of transport layers,
transparent electrodes and perovskite as the semiconductor active
material, can operate at electrical current densities tens of
thousands of times higher (3 kA cm-2) than conventional
OLEDs can."
"With this architecture, imec enhanced
amplified
spontaneous emission, with an electrical assist of the
conventional optical pumping. By doing so, imec demonstrated that
electrical injection contributes 13% to the total amount of stimulated
emission and thus approaches the threshold to achieve a thin-film
injection laser," stated Robert Gehlhaar, imec project manager.
"Reaching this landmark milestone towards high-power thin-film laser
diodes is paving the way to exciting new applications of thin-film
perovskite lasers."
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