Reducing the impact of Auger recombination in quasi-2D perovskite light-emitting diodes

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Abstract

Rapid Auger recombination represents an important challenge faced by quasi-2D perovskites, which induces resulting perovskite light-emitting diodes’ (PeLEDs) efficiency roll-off. In principle, Auger recombination rate is proportional to materials’ exciton binding energy (Eb). Thus, Auger recombination can be suppressed by reducing the corresponding materials’ Eb. Here, a polar molecule, p-fluorophenethylammonium, is employed to generate quasi-2D perovskites with reduced Eb. Recombination kinetics reveal the Auger recombination rate does decrease to one-order-of magnitude lower compared to its PEA+ analogues. After effective passivation, nonradiative recombination is greatly suppressed, which enables resulting films to exhibit outstanding photoluminescence quantum yields in a broad range of excitation density. We herein demonstrate the very efficient PeLEDs with a peak external quantum efficiency of 20.36%. More importantly, devices exhibit a record luminance of 82,480 cd m−2 due to the suppressed efficiency roll-off, which represent one of the brightest visible PeLEDs yet.

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Jiang, Y., Cui, M., Li, S., Sun, C., Huang, Y., Wei, J., … Yuan, M. (2021). Reducing the impact of Auger recombination in quasi-2D perovskite light-emitting diodes. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20555-9

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