Quantum dots: evolving downconverter technology beyond phosphors? eeNews Europe

Date 18th, Oct 2018
Source eeNews Europe - General News Websites

DESCRIPTION

Quantum dots (QDs) are often billed as the ultimate, or at least as the next generation of, phosphors. The main driver often is the QDs' ability to act as ultra-narrowband downconverters, resulting in extremely wide colour gamut displays and efficient and high CRI solid state LED lights.In this article, we will explore the merits of quantum dots as ultimate phosphors. Phosphor converted LEDs (pc-LEDs) are in many display and lighting applications. There, they enable a single LED to achieve white colour. This is commonly done by mixing yellow plus red phosphors within the LED packaging. There are of course other ways of achieving white colours such as having three LEDs, or mixing three phosphors each for a different colour, and so on.   To enable this application and to ride the rising wave of LED sales, numerous new phosphor compositions have been developed in recent years. These phosphors have had to satisfy several criteria: strongly absorb the blue of the LED, achieve high efficiency, exhibit high chemical, light, heat and humidity stability, suffer from minimal heat or light quenching, offer low cost and a composition free of toxic elements, and so on. These requirements, more challenging that those previously encountered and solved for CRT displays and fluorescent lights, unleashed a worldwide research and screening effort. Consequently, many families of phosphors (nitride, fluorides, etc) were developed, largely addressing most requirements.  However, one persistent problem often remained: phosphors had wide emission bandwidths even for single colour ones. This was particularly an issue for red phosphors because red sits at the edge of the sensitivity spectrum of our eyes. As such, broadband red phosphors would re-emit light in wavelengths outside the eye's sensitivity range, thus wasting it and lowering overall efficiency. To overcome this, various narrowband phosphors have been developed in more recent years with notable success. The fluoride KSF (K2SiF6:Mn) phosphor is a leading example. It gives five 2nm emission lines in the red range. Another example is SLA (SrLiAl3N4:Eu) which gives 50nm FWHM in the red. The former is superior to any QD in terms of the narrowness of emission band, however it has some limitations in that its five emission peaks are slightly off-target and that it has a long photoluminescent decay time (on the order milliseconds). The latter, of course, is still not as narrow as QDs. Note that the development of narrowband phosphors was never just limited to red, although the need for red was most pronounced. Green phosphors were also developed. One example is β‐SiAlON which gives a FWHM around 55nm. Why quantum dots then?   The question is why bother with quantum dots given that phosphors achieve maturity, stability, and even narrowband emission including for red? The answer is to be found in the potential for the simultaneous satisfaction of all criteria, including narrow emission, high conversion efficiency, control over emission wavelength, fast PL decay time, small particle size, and so on. This, if achieved, will potentially represent the ultimate downconverter material. I will explore some of the points further below: Narrowband emission: QDs are ultra-narrowband downconverters. This is their key characteristic. Cd based QDs achieve 35nm and <20nm FWHM in commercial and laboratory settings, respectively. InP QDs achieve c. 40nm commercially but reaching 35nm remains difficult even in labs. Green perovskite nanocrystals (organic MPbBr3 or inorganic CsPbBr3) achieve sub 20nm FWHM even in commercial settings due to perovskite QDs' (PeQDs) relatively higher tolerance of disorder. Phosphors, in contrast, have broader bands. The figure below compares QDs vs various phosphors. Comparing the FWHM of phosphors vs quantum dots. The blue bars represent the typical FWHM of various phosphors of different colours and compositions whereas the black bars represent QDs (CdSe, InP and inorganic green CsPbBr3 perovskite). The value selected for QDs are typical commercial values (not leading champion results). Note that QDs offer a narrower band compared to all but one phosphor technology. For more info refer to Quantum Dot Materials and Technologies 2018-2028: Trends, Markets, Players. Source: IDTechEx. Evidently, generally, QDs offer narrow emission. Yellow phosphor emitters, of course by definition, are broadband at c. 120nm FWHM. Single colour phosphors are also relatively broadbands, typically ranging from 55nm to 85nm FWHM. As for green emission, QDs are superior to all the phosphors listed below including the leading β‐SiAlON (c. 55nm). As for red emission, QDs have narrower emission bandwidths compared to all except the relatively recent KSF:Mn which gives five 2nm emission lines. As stated above though, the downside for this successful material is its long PL lifetimes (milliseconds) and slight off-target red emission coordinates. Emission wavelength tuning: QDs give control over their emission wavelength via size and composition. This is a much more facile and versatile lever than the arduous process of screening for the right host and activator materials to achieve an optimal phosphor. This is important because parameters such as CRI are highly sensitive to the exact emission wavelength once the FWHM is narrow. Particle size: QDs have particle sizes on the order of a few nanometres whereas phosphors particles have diameters ranging from a few to a few tens of micrometres. This may be an advantage when downconverter materials need to be integrated into small devices such as RGB microLED displays. Relative quantum efficiency vs particle size for various phosphors and quantum dots. It is clear that phosphor particles are orders of magnitude larger than QDs. This is why their properties are independent of their size since size effects only come in play in the nanometer range. QDs are however a much less mature technology. They are today commercially deployed in displays predominantly as remote downconverters placed on films far away from the light source. This is because their light and heat stability is still an issue. This issue must be overcome if quantum dots are placed on LEDs for display or lighting applications.   Why does the future hold? The current status is that QDs can tolerate mild on-chip conditions, making them suitable for some low-power lighting LEDs and low-power microLEDs. The processing of QDs has also been developed, demonstrating that they can be mixed into resins (e.g., silicone) and placed into LED packages. Indeed, first products for low power LEDs have already been launched. There is still however some way to go to make them compatible with high power LEDs for lighting and displays. This, thus, represents an ongoing direction of development. For more insights refer to Quantum Dot Materials and Technologies 2018-2028: Trends, Markets, Players. It provides our ten-year technology roadmap, showing how various QD implementation approaches including on-chip QDs will rise and fall. It includes ten-year market forecasts, segmented by QD technology and application, showing how the market will grow and how the technology mix will be significantly transformed with time. Here, we will consider edge-type QD, QD enhancement films, QD colour filters, on-chip QDs, emissive QD displays, and so on. We consider Cd based materials as well as InP and perovskite ones in detail. We dedicate a full thorough chapter to existing phosphors.   About the author: Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh is Research Director at IDTechEx - www.idtechex.com Related articles: IDTechEx' review of quantum dot films in displays IDTechEx tracks new toxins in electronics, highlight alternatives Quantum dots: time of growth and change