Stabilized Low-Dimensional Species for Deep-Blue Perovskite Light-Emitting Diodes with EQE Approaching 3.4

J Am Chem Soc. 2022 Oct 12;144(40):18470-18478. doi: 10.1021/jacs.2c07172. Epub 2022 Sep 26.

Abstract

Despite recent encouraging developments, achieving efficient blue perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs) have been widely considered a critical challenge. The efficiency breakthrough only occurred in the sky-blue region, and the device performance of pure-blue and deep-blue PeLEDs lags far behind those of their sky-blue counterparts. To avoid the negative effects associated with dimensionality reduction and excess chloride typically needed to achieve deep-blue emission, here we demonstrate guanidine (GA+)-induced deep-blue (∼457 nm) perovskite emitters enabling spectrally stable PeLEDs with a record external quantum efficiency (EQE) over 3.41% through a combination of quasi-2D perovskites and halide engineering. Owing to the presence of GA+, even a small inclusion of chloride ions is sufficient for generating deep-blue electroluminescence (EL), in clear contrast to the previously reported deep-blue PeLEDs with significant chloride inclusion that negatively affects spectral stability. Based on the carrier dynamics analysis and theoretical calculation, GA+ is found to stabilize the low-dimensional species during annealing, retarding the cascade energy transfer and facilitating the deep-blue EL. Our findings open a potential third route to achieve deep-blue PeLEDs beyond the conventional methods of dimensionality reduction and excessive chloride incorporation.