High-efficiency perovskite-polymer bulk heterostructure light-emitting diodes
Baodan Zhao, Sai Bai, Vincent Kim, Robin Lamboll, Ravichandran, Shivanna, Florian Auras, Johannes M. Richter, Le Yang, Linjie Dai, Mejd, Alsari, Xiao-Jian She, Lusheng Liang, Jiangbin Zhang, Samuele Lilliu, Peng, Gao, Henry J. Snaith, Jianpu Wang, Neil C. Greenham

TL;DR
This paper reports on perovskite-polymer bulk heterostructure LEDs achieving record-high external quantum efficiencies over 20%, with long operational lifetime and near-unity internal quantum efficiency, highlighting their potential for light-emission applications.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel perovskite-polymer bulk heterostructure LED design with record efficiency and stability, demonstrating effective elimination of non-radiative recombination pathways.
Findings
External quantum efficiency exceeds 20%
Operational half-life of 46 hours under continuous operation
Near 100% internal quantum efficiency inferred from modeling
Abstract
Perovskite-based optoelectronic devices have gained significant attention due to their remarkable performance and low processing cost, particularly for solar cells. However, for perovskite light-emitting diodes (LEDs), non-radiative charge carrier recombination has limited electroluminescence (EL) efficiency. Here we demonstrate perovskite-polymer bulk heterostructure LEDs exhibiting record-high external quantum efficiencies (EQEs) exceeding 20%, and an EL half-life of 46 hours under continuous operation. This performance is achieved with an emissive layer comprising quasi-2D and 3D perovskites and an insulating polymer. Transient optical spectroscopy reveals that photogenerated excitations at the quasi-2D perovskite component migrate to lower-energy sites within 1 ps. The dominant component of the photoluminescence (PL) is primarily bimolecular and is characteristic of the 3D regions.…
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