Quantum dot display

A quantum dot display is a type of display technology. Quantum dots (QD) or semiconductor nanocrystals can provide an alternative for applications such as display technology. This display technology is similar to organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays, in that light is supplied on demand, which enables more efficient displays.

Unlike light-emitting diodes (LEDs), organic electroluminescent devices can be deposited over larger areas and on flexible or non-planar substrates. Large area display or general illumination devices using OLEDs are available commercially. However, the light emitting organic molecules tend to degrade and are sensitive to humidity and prone to oxidation. Quantum dots can support large, flexible displays but do not degrade, making them good candidates for flat-panel TV screens, digital cameras, mobile phones and personal gaming equipment.[1][2][3]

Properties and performance are determined by the size and/or composition of the QD. QDs are both photo-active (photoluminescent) and electro-active (electroluminescent) allowing them to be readily incorporated into new emissive display architectures.[4]

Colloidal quantum dots irradiated with a UV light. Different sized quantum dots emit different color light due to quantum confinement.

History

The idea of using quantum dot as a light source emerged in the 1990s. Early applications included imaging using QD infrared photodetectors, light emitting diodes and single-color light emitting devices.[5] Starting from early 2000, scientists started to realize the potential of developing quantum dot for light sources and displays.[6]

A widespread practical application is emerging in so-called Quantum Dot TVs. It should be noted however, that these new TV sets are still LCD TVs as far as picture generation is concerned. QDs are used to improve the backlighting. Instead of using white LEDs for backlighting, light from a blue LED is converted by QDs to relatively pure red and green, so that this combination of blue, green and red light incurs less absoption of unwanted colors by the color filters behind the LCD screen, thereby increasing useful light throughput and providing a better color gamut. The first TV manufacturer shipping TVs of this kind was Sony in 2013, although not yet labeled as a QD TV.[7] At the Consumer Electronics Show 2015, Samsung Electronics, LG Electronics, the Chinese TCL Corporation and Sony showed QD-enhanced LED-backlighting of LCD TVs.[8] [9]

Working principle

Optical properties of quantum dots

Unlike simple atomic structures, a quantum dot structure has the unusual property that energy levels are strongly dependent on the structure's size. For example, CdSe quantum dot light emission can be tuned from red (5 nm diameter) to the violet region (1.5 nm dot). The physical reason for QD coloration is the quantum confinement effect and is directly related to their energy levels. The bandgap energy that determines the energy (and hence color) of the fluorescent light is inversely proportional to the square of the size of quantum dot. Larger QDs have more energy levels that are more closely spaced, allowing the QD to absorb photons of lower energy (redder color). In other words, the emitted photon energy increases as the dot size decreases, because greater energy is required to confine the semiconductor excitation to a smaller volume.[10]

Quantum dot light-emitting diodes

Quantum-dot-based LEDs are characterized by pure and saturated emission colors with narrow bandwidth. Their emission wavelength is easily tuned by changing the size of the quantum dots. Moreover, QD-LED offer high color purity and durability combined with the efficiency, flexibility, and low processing cost of organic light-emitting devices. QD-LED structure can be tuned over the entire visible wavelength range from 460 nm (blue) to 650 nm (red).

The structure of QD-LED is similar to the basic design of OLED. The major difference is that the light emitting centers are cadmium selenide (CdSe) nanocrystals. A layer of cadmium-selenium quantum dots is sandwiched between layers of electron-transporting and hole-transporting organic materials. An applied electric field causes electrons and holes to move into the quantum dot layer, where they are captured in the quantum dot and recombine, emitting photons. The spectrum of photon emission is narrow, characterized by its full width at half the maximum value.[6][11]

The challenge of bringing electrons and holes together in small regions for efficient recombination to emit photons without escaping or dissipating was addressed by sandwiching a thin emissive layer between a hole-transporter layer (HTL) and an electron-transport layer (ETL). By making an emissive layer in a single layer of quantum dots, electrons and holes may be transferred directly from the surfaces of the ETL and HTL, providing high recombination efficiency.[12]

Both ETL and HTL consist of organic materials. Most organic electroluminescent materials favor injection and transport of holes rather than electrons. Thus, the electron-hole recombination generally occurs near the cathode, which could lead to the quenching of the exciton produced. In order to prevent the produced excitons or holes from approaching the cathode, a hole-blocking layer plays dual roles in blocking holes moving towards the cathode and transporting the electrons to the emitting QD layer. Tris-aluminium (Alq3), bathocuproine (BCP), and TAZ are the most commonly used hole-blocking materials. These materials can be used as both electron-transporting layer and hole blocking layer.[13]

The array of quantum dots is manufactured by self-assembly in a process known as spin casting: a solution of quantum dots in an organic material is poured onto a substrate, which is then set spinning to spread the solution evenly.

Fabrication process

Quantum dots are solution processable and suitable for wet processing techniques. The two major fabrication techniques for QD-LED are called phase separation and contact-printing.[14]

Phase separation

Phase separation is suitable for forming large-area ordered QD monolayers. A single QD layer is formed by spin casting a mixed solution of QD and TPD. This process simultaneously yields QD monolayers self-assembled into hexagonally close-packed arrays and places this monolayer on top of a co-deposited contact. During solvent drying, the QDs phase separate from the organic under-layer material (TPD) and rise towards the film's surface. The resulting QD structure is affected by many parameters: solution concentration, solvent ration, QD size distribution and QD aspect ratio. Also important is QD solution and organic solvent purity.[15]

Although phase separation is relatively simple, it is not suitable for display device applications. Since spin-casting does not allow lateral patterning of different sized QDs (RGB), phase separation cannot create a multi-color QD-LED. Moreover, it is not ideal to have an organic under-layer material for a QD-LED; an organic under-layer must be homogeneous, a constraint which limits the number of applicable device designs.

Contact printing

The contact printing process for forming QD thin films is a solvent-free method, which is simple and cost efficient with high throughput. During the process, the device structure is not exposed to solvents. Since charge transport layers in QD-LED structures are solvent-sensitive organic thin films, avoiding solvent during the process is a major benefit. This method can produce RGB patterned electroluminescent structures with 1000 ppi (pixels-per-inch) resolution.[16]

The overall process of contact printing:

Contact printing allows fabrication of multi-color QD-LEDs. A QD-LED was fabricated with an emissive layer consisting of 25-µm wide stripes of red, green and blue QD monolayers. Contact printing methods also minimize the amount of QD required, reducing costs. The demonstrated color gamut from QD-LEDs exceeds the performance of both LCD and OLED display technologies.[16]

Comparison

Nanocrystal displays render as much as a 30% increase in the visible spectrum, while using 30 to 50% less power than LCDs, in large part because nanocrystal displays don't need backlighting. QD LEDs are 50-100 times brighter than CRT and LCD displays, emitting 40,000 cd/m2. QDs are soluble in both aqueous and non-aqueous solvents, which provides for printable and flexible displays of all sizes, including large area TVs. QDs are inorganic, offering the potential for improved lifetimes compared to OLED. (However, since many parts of QD-LED are often made of organic materials, further development is required to improve the functional lifetime.) Resolution can also be higher.

Other advantages include better saturated green colors, manufacturability on polymers, thinner display and the use of the same material to generate different colors.

However, blue quantum dots require highly precise timing control during the reaction, because blue quantum dots are just slightly above the minimum size. Since sunlight contains roughly equal luminosities of red, green and blue, a display needs to produce approximately equal luminosities of blue, red and green. The human eye requires blue to be about five times more luminous than green, requiring five times more power.[17]

See also

References

  1. Quantum-dot displays could outshine their rivals, New Scientist, 10 December 2007
  2. Quantum Dot Electroluminescence
  3. Nanocrystal Displays
  4. The future of cadmium free QD display technology (QD TV)
  5. R. Victor; K. Irina (2000). "Electron and photon effects in imaging devices utilizing quantum dot infrared photodetectors and light emitting diodes". Proceedings of SPIE 3948: 206–219. doi:10.1117/12.382121.
  6. 6.0 6.1 P. Anikeeva; J. Halpert; M. Bawendi; V. Bulovic (2009). "Quantum dot light-emitting deices with electroluminescence tunable over the entire visible spectrum". Nano Letters 9 (7): 2532–2536. doi:10.1021/nl9002969. PMID 19514711.
  7. Sony BRAVIA TV with Triluminos technology
  8. IEEE Spectrum: CES 2015 - Placing bets on the New TV Technologies. 7 January, 2015
  9. http://www.cnet.com/news/lg-leaps-quantum-dot-rivals-with-new-tv/
  10. Saleh, Bahaa E. A.; Teich, Malvin Carl (5 February 2013). Fundamentals of Photonics. Wiley. p. 498. ISBN 978-1-118-58581-8.
  11. Seth Coe; Wing-Keung Woo; Moungi Bawendi; Vladimir Bulovic (2002). "Electroluminescence from single monolayers of nanocrystals in molecular organic devices". Nature 420 (6917): 800–803. doi:10.1038/nature01217. PMID 12490945.
  12. Tetsuo Tsutsui (2002). "A light-emitting sandwich filling". Nature 420 (6917): 753–755. doi:10.1038/420752a.
  13. Yue Wang et al. (2009). "Photophysical and charge-transport properties of hole-blocking material-TAZ: A theoretical study". Synthetic Metals 159 (17–18): 1767–1771. doi:10.1016/j.synthmet.2009.05.023.
  14. Coe-Sullivan, Seth; Steckel, Jonathan S.; Kim, LeeAnn; Bawendi, Moungi G. et al. (2005). "Method for fabrication of saturated RGB quantum dot light emitting devices". Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging 5739: 108–115. doi:10.1117/12.590708.
  15. Coe-Sullivan, Seth; Steckel, Jonathan S.; Woo, Wing-Keung; Bawendi, Moungi G. et al. (2005). "Large-Area Ordered Quantum Dot Monolayers via Phase Separation During Spin-Casting". Advanced Functional Materials 15 (7): 1117–1124. doi:10.1002/adfm.200400468.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Kim, LeeAnn; Anikeeva, Polina O.; Coe-Sullivan, Seth; Steckel, Jonathan S. et al. (2008). "Contact Printing of Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Devices". Nano Letters 8 (12): 4513–4517. doi:10.1021/nl8025218. PMID 19053797.
  17. Quantum Dot Pros and Cons

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