Lifetime elongation of quantum-dot light-emitting diodes by inhibiting the degradation of hole transport layer†
Abstract
Developing a colloidal quantum-dot light-emitting device (QDLED) with high efficiency and good reliability is necessarily preliminary for the next-generation high-quality display application. Most QDLED reports are focused on efficiency improvement, but the device operational lifetime issue is less addressed and also the relevant degradation mechanisms. This study achieved a 1.72 times elongation in the operational lifetime and a 9 times improvement in the efficiency of QDLED by inserting a hole-transporting/electron-blocking poly(9-vinylcarbazole) (PVK) layer, which prevented operational degradation on poly[(9,9-dioctylfluorenyl-2,7-diyl)-co-(4,4′-(N-(4-secbutylphenyl))-diphenylamine)] (TFB) hole-transporting layer and also confined the electron in the QD-emitting layer. Although the TFB/PVK HTL structure is a well-known pair to enhance the device performance, its detailed mechanisms were rarely mentioned, especially for relative operational lifetime issues. Herein, a new insight behind operational lifetime elongation of QDLED is disclosed through various fundamental experiments including steady-state photoluminescence, transient electroluminescence and single-carrier only devices. Evidently, other than QD degradation, this study found that the other crucial factor that decreased the device lifetime was TFB-HTL degradation using steady-state photoluminescence and transient electroluminescence analyses. The PVK electron-only device exhibited a stable voltage value when it was driven by fixed current, which also affirmed that PVK has excellent electron-stability characteristics.