4.8 Article

Deciphering exciton-generation processes in quantum-dot electroluminescence

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15944-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFB0401600, 2018YFB2200401]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51522209, 21975220, 91833303, 51911530155, 91733302, 61635009, 61975180]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2017XZZX001-03A, 2019QNA5005]
  4. Zhejiang University Education Foundation Global Partnership Fund

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Electroluminescence of colloidal nanocrystals promises a new generation of high-performance and solution-processable light-emitting diodes. The operation of nanocrystal-based light-emitting diodes relies on the radiative recombination of electrically generated excitons. However, a fundamental question-how excitons are electrically generated in individual nanocrystals-remains unanswered. Here, we reveal a nanoscopic mechanism of sequential electron-hole injection for exciton generation in nanocrystal-based electroluminescent devices. To decipher the corresponding elementary processes, we develop electrically-pumped single-nanocrystal spectroscopy. While hole injection into neutral quantum dots is generally considered to be inefficient, we find that the intermediate negatively charged state of quantum dots triggers confinement-enhanced Coulomb interactions, which simultaneously accelerate hole injection and hinder excessive electron injection. In-situ/operando spectroscopy on state-of-the-art quantum-dot light-emitting diodes demonstrates that exciton generation at the ensemble level is consistent with the charge-confinement-enhanced sequential electron-hole injection mechanism probed at the single-nanocrystal level. Our findings provide a universal mechanism for enhancing charge balance in nanocrystal-based electroluminescent devices. Today it remains unclear how excitons are electrically generated in individual nanocrystals. Here, the authors propose the identification of the longlived intermediate QD- state for exciton generation of CdSe-based QD-LEDs by a room temperature electrically-pumped single-molecule spectroscopy.

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