New Perovskite Glass Composite Enabling Unbreakable Screens

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Lead-halide perovskites are highly sought-after semiconducting materials that can harvest sunlight and convert it into renewable electricity. Their low cost and high efficiency make them ideal for optoelectronic applications like solar cells and LEDs. They are, however, extremely sensitive to light, heat, air, and water—even airborne moisture would kill the current devices in minutes, severely hindering their upscale applications.

Our team developed a technology to wrap or bind the perovskites in porous glass, which is also known as zeolitic imidazolate framework glass. This procedure is crucial for stabilizing the perovskites, boosting their efficiency, and preventing hazardous lead ions from seeping out, leading a step forward in perovskite technology that was previously only achievable in a laboratory setting with a bone-dry atmosphere. More importantly, the new approach will provide more durable perovskite with tuneable optoelectronic properties and greater light emission efficiency, resulting in superior picture quality and strength for lighting LEDs as well as smartphone, television, and computer screens. In particular, the spongelike atomic arrangement gives the glass unique mechanical qualities, which would make the perovskite glass composite screens extremely tough and flexible, reducing brittleness-related breakage issues.

In modern society, quantum dot LED screens are considered the best choice for image display and performance. Our discoveries will pave the way for the development of unbreakable perovskite glass composite screens with crystal clear image quality.

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  • ABOUT THE ENTRANT

  • Name:
    Jingwei Hou
  • Type of entry:
    team
    Team members:
    Dr. Jingwei Hou, Xuemei Li
  • Profession:
    Scientist
  • Jingwei is inspired by:
    Dr Hou was motivated by an odd conversation over morning tea, during which he found that a chocolate chip cookie is preferable than a sandwich, which is difficult to grasp due to its layer-by-layer structure. The cell phone screen is sandwich-like in construction and thus prone to breakage. As a result, the team was inspired to develop a screen that is more like a “chocolate chip cookie”, with the small quantum dots that emit light embedded in the glass substrate for increased durability.
  • Patent status:
    patented