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Synthesis of UV/blue light-emitting aluminum hydroxide with oxygen vacancy and their application to electrically driven light-emitting diodes
Aluminum hydroxide nanoparticles, one of the essential luminescent materials for display technology, bio-imaging, and sensors due to their non-toxicity, affordable pricing, and rare-earth-free phosphors, are synthesized via a simple method at a reaction time of 10 min at a low temperature of 200 °C....
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Royal Society of Chemistry
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8981236/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35425415 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra07942e |
Sumario: | Aluminum hydroxide nanoparticles, one of the essential luminescent materials for display technology, bio-imaging, and sensors due to their non-toxicity, affordable pricing, and rare-earth-free phosphors, are synthesized via a simple method at a reaction time of 10 min at a low temperature of 200 °C. By controlling the precursor's ratio of aluminum acetylacetonate to oleic acid, UV or blue light-emitting aluminum hydroxides with oxygen defects and carbonyl radicals can be synthesized. As a result, aluminum hydroxide (Al(OH)(3−x)) nanoparticles overwhelmingly emit UVA light (390 nm) because of the oxygen defects in nanoparticles, and carbon-related radicals on the nanoparticles are responsible for the blue-light emission at 465 nm. Electrically driven light-emitting devices are applied using luminescent aluminum hydroxide as an emissive layer, that consists of a cost-efficient inverted bottom-emission structure as [ITO (cathode)/ZnO/emissive layers/2,2′-bis(4-(carbazol-9-yl)phenyl)-biphenyl (BCBP)/MoO(3)/Al (anode)]. The device with aluminum hydroxide as an emissive layer shows a maximum luminance of 215.48 cd m(−2) and external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 0.12%. The new method for synthesizing UV–blue emitting aluminum hydroxides and their application to LEDs will contribute to developing the field of non-toxic optoelectronic material or UV–blue emitting devices. |
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