2 research outputs found

    Surface-ligand-modified CdSe/CdS nanorods for high-performance light-emitting diodes

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    Colloidal nanocrystals (NCs) play an important role in the field of optoelectronic devices such as photovoltaic cells, photodetectors, and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). The properties of NC films are strongly affected by ligands attached to them, which constitute a barrier for charge transport between adjacent NCs. Therefore, the method of surface modification by ligand exchange has been used to improve the electrical conductivity of NC films. However, surface modification to NCs in LEDs can also affect emission characteristics. Among NCs, nanorods have unique properties, such as suppression of nonradiative Auger recombination and linearly polarized light emission. In this work, CdSe/CdS nanorods (NRs) were prepared by the hot injection method. To increase the charge transport into CdSe/CdS NRs, we adopted ligand modification to CdSe/CdS NRs. Using this technique, we could shorten the injection barrier length between CdSe/CdS NRs and adjacent layers. It leads to a more balanced charge injection of electron/hole and a greatly increased current efficiency of CdSe/CdS NR-LEDs. In the NR-LEDs, the ligand exchange boosted the electroluminance, reaching a sixfold increase from 848 cd/m2 of native surfactants to 5600 cd/m2 of the exchanged n-octanoic acid ligands at 12 V. The improvement of CdSe/CdS NR-LED performance is closely correlated to the efficient control of charge balance via ligand modification strategy, which is expected to be indispensable to the future NR-LED-based optoelectronic system</p

    Plasmon enhanced light–matter interaction of rice-like nanorods by a cube-plate nanocavity

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    Plasmonic nanocavity is widely used for enhancing light–matter interaction. Here, an efficient plasmonic nanocavity of the cube-plate system is constructed for the fluorescence enhancement of rice-like CdSe/ CdS nanorods (NRs) with tunable emission wavelength. Over ten thousand times fluorescence enhancement is achieved with the assistance of the plasmonic nanocavity. Additionally, a small splitting effect is observed in both photoluminescence and scattering spectra of the NRs in the nanocavity owing to the intermediate coupling effect between the NRs and plasmonic nanocavity, which provides a potential application for optical signal enhancement and strong light–matter interactio
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