Sensors (Jul 2024)

Microscale Lateral Perovskite Light Emitting Diode Realized by Self-Doping Phenomenon

  • Wenzhe Gao,
  • He Huang,
  • Chenming Wang,
  • Yongzhe Zhang,
  • Zilong Zheng,
  • Jinpeng Li,
  • Xiaoqing Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s24144454
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 14
p. 4454

Abstract

Read online

High-definition near-eye display technology has extremely close sight distance, placing a higher demand on the size, performance, and array of light-emitting pixel devices. Based on the excellent photoelectric performance of metal halide perovskite materials, perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs) have high photoelectric conversion efficiency, adjustable emission spectra, and excellent charge transfer characteristics, demonstrating great prospects as next-generation light sources. Despite their potential, the solubility of perovskite in photoresist presents a hurdle for conventional micro/nano processing techniques, resulting in device sizes typically exceeding 50 μm. This limitation impedes the further downsizing of perovskite-based components. Herein, we propose a plane-structured PeLED device that can achieve microscale light-emitting diodes with a single pixel device size < 2 μm and a luminescence lifetime of approximately 3 s. This is accomplished by fabricating a patterned substrate and regulating ion distribution in the perovskite through self-doping effects to form a PN junction. This breakthrough overcomes the technical challenge of perovskite–photoresist incompatibility, which has hindered the development of perovskite materials in micro/nano optoelectronic devices. The strides made in this study open up promising avenues for the advancement of PeLEDs within the realm of micro/nano optoelectronic devices.

Keywords