SOLAR DAILY
Stable perovskite LEDs one step closer
by Staff Writers
Linkoping, China (SPX) Apr 06, 2020

Heyong Wang, Ph.D.-student at Linkoping University.

Researchers at Linkoping University, working with colleagues in Great Britain, China and the Czech Republic, have developed a perovskite light-emitting diode (LED) with both high efficiency and long operational stability. The result has been published in Nature Communications.

"Light-emitting diodes based on perovskites are still not sufficiently stable for practical use, but we have brought them one step closer", says Professor Feng Gao, and head of research at the Division of Biomolecular and Organic Electronics, Linkoping University.

Perovskites are a large family of semiconducting materials that have aroused the interest of scientists around the world. Their special crystal structure means that they have excellent optical and electronic properties, while they are both easy and cheap to manufacture. Most progress has been made in research into the use of perovskites in solar cells, but they are also well-suited for the manufacture of LEDs.

The efficiency of the LEDs, which measures the fraction of charge carriers input to the material that are subsequently emitted as light, has increased considerably in recent years, and will soon reach that of competing technology. They are, however, not particularly stable, which means that so far they cannot be used in practice.

"Much remains to be done. Until now, most of the perovskite LEDs have either low efficiency or poor device stability", says Xiao-Ke LiU, research fellow in the Division of Biomolecular and Organic Electronics. He and Feng Gao are the principal authors of the article.

Many research groups have worked on this dilemma, without particular success. Now, researchers at LiU, working with colleagues in Great Britain, China and the Czech Republic, have found a way forward. They have used a perovskite that consists of lead, iodine and an organic substance, formamidinium. They have then embedded the perovskite into an organic molecule matrix to form a composite thin film.

"This molecule with two amino groups at its ends helps the other substances to form a high quality crystal structure that is characteristic for perovskites, and makes the crystal stable", says Heyong Wang, doctoral student in the Division of Biomolecular and Organic Electronics.

The new composite thin film has enabled the research group to develop LEDs with an efficiency of 17.3% with a long half-lifetime, approximately 100 hours.

Perovskites that contain lead and a halogen, in this case iodine, have the best light-emitting properties.

"We would very much like to get rid of the lead. So far we haven't found a good way to do this, but we are working hard on it, says Feng Gao.

The next steps are to test new combinations of different perovskites and organic molecules and to understand in detail how the nucleation and crystallisation processes occur. Different perovskites give light at different wavelengths, which is a requirement for the long-term goal of obtaining white light LEDs.

Research Report: "Perovskite-molecule composite thin films for efficient and stable light-emitting diodes"


Related Links
Linkoping University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Poland quadruples solar energy output, becomes 5th largest producer in Europe
Warsaw, Poland (SPX) Mar 30, 2020
Last year was the most fortunate year for the European Union in the solar energy sector. In 2019, the EU added 16.7 GW solar energy installations to its portfolio, increasing the number by 104% since 2018. The sharp rise marked the biggest growth in solar energy generation since 2010. So far, five member countries have contributed the most, including Spain (4.7 GW), Germany (4 GW), the Netherlands (2.5 GW), France (1.1 GW), and Poland (784 MW). Although the other 18 member states are lagging behin ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Lockheed awarded $932.8M to make THAADs for U.S., Saudi Arabia

Missile Defense Agency's Long Range Discrimination Radar closer to delivery

Arrows of misfortune as US Missile Defence needs upgrading

Syrian air defence responds to 'Israeli missiles': state media

SOLAR DAILY
Raytheon awarded $641.3M for work on Tomahawks for Navy

Raytheon nabs $2.1B for work on Standard Missile-3 Block IB rounds

Raytheon, Aerojet announce $1B deal for Standard Missile projects

Raytheon nabs $392.4M for tactical missiles

SOLAR DAILY
SUGUS kicks off, a European project for integrating drones into the airspace

New research improves drone detection

Skyryse introduces automation flight operating system FlightOS

Hughes awarded contract by GA-ASI to connect US Army's Gray Eagle UAV with future SatComs

SOLAR DAILY
AEHF-6 Satellite Actively Communicating With U.S. Space Force

Sixth Advanced Extremely High Frequency satellite ready for launch

Lockheed Martin selects SEAKR Wolverine mission processor for Protected Tactical SATCOM

Army scientists create quantum sensor that covers entire radio frequency spectrum

SOLAR DAILY
AFRL creates safer-than-steel synthetic winch cable for cargo aircraft

Raytheon, Uptake bring AI to Marines' M88 maintenance

Navy awards $74M in contracts for BLU 111 warhead assemblies

Intelligent fuze detects and destroys deeply buried targets

SOLAR DAILY
Coronavirus challenges US military machine

DoD urges defense contractors, subcontractors to stay at work

Lockheed Martin names new CEO

Pentagon 'wishes to reconsider' awarding JEDI contract to Microsoft

SOLAR DAILY
Trump says US can avoid major epidemic as virus spreads

Last Soviet marshal and 1991 coup plotter Yazov dies

After US, Greece to sign defence deal with France: officials

As world hunkers down, Trump moves full-speed against US foes

SOLAR DAILY
New DNA origami motor breaks speed record for nano machines

Deep-sea osmolyte makes biomolecular machines heat-tolerant

Nanobubbles in nanodroplets

New production method for carbon nanotubes gets green light