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Hybrid III-Nitride/Organic Semiconductor Nanostructure with High Efficiency Nonradiative Energy Transfer for White Light Emitters
69
Citations
22
References
2013
Year
Yellow PolymerEngineeringOrganic ElectronicsChemistryLuminescence PropertyChemical EngineeringNanoelectronicsThermally Activated Delayed FluorescenceCompound SemiconductorMaterials SciencePhotoluminescenceOrganic SemiconductorYellow LightHybrid StructureOrganic Charge-transfer CompoundWhite OledSolid-state LightingApplied PhysicsOptoelectronicsWhite Light Emitters
A novel hybrid inorganic/organic semiconductor nanostructure has been developed, leading to very efficient nonradiative resonant-energy-transfer (RET) between blue emitting InGaN/GaN multiple quantum wells (MQWs) and a yellow light emitting polymer. The utilization of InGaN/GaN nanorod arrays allows for both higher optical performance of InGaN blue emission and a minimized separation between the InGaN/GaN MQWs and the emitting polymer as a color conversion medium. A significant reduction in decay lifetime of the excitons in the InGaN/GaN MQWs of the hybrid structure has been observed as a result of the nonradiative RET from the nitride emitter to the yellow polymer. A detailed calculation has demonstrated that the efficiency of the nonradiative RET is as high as 73%. The hybrid structure exhibits an extremely fast nonradiative RET with a rate of 0.76 ns(-1), approximately three times higher than the InGaN/GaN MQW nonradiative decay rate of 0.26 ns(-1). It means that the RET dominates the nonradiative processes in the nitride quantum well structure, which can further enhance the overall device performance.
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