Paper 13351-26
Inorganic halide perovskites color-conversion layers fabricated using pulsed laser deposition for microled displays (Invited Paper)
28 January 2025 • 4:05 PM - 4:35 PM PST | Moscone South, Room 214 (Level 2)
Abstract
The fabrication of full color microLED displays with a small pixel pitch represents a technological challenge. Halide perovskites are materials with interesting optoelectronic properties and a higher absorption coefficient, which could in theory address color conversion for pixel pitches of 1 µm. In this study, inorganic halide perovskite thin films are manufactured using Pulsed Laser Deposition. Their potential for use in color conversion layers is investigated. Their optical properties are measured by photoluminescence. The color emitted is pure and the emission is uniform on 200 mm wafers. Photoluminescence under constant optical flux indicates a high stability of the color convertors. The high absorption coefficient measured confirms they could be used for microLED with smaller pixel pitches. These properties indicate that pulsed laser-deposited inorganic halide perovskite thin films are promising candidates for microLED color conversion, especially for pixel pitches of 1 µm or below.
Presenter
Florian Dupont
CEA (France)
Florian Dupont is a material scientist at CEA-Leti, France. He is specialized in the growth of thin films using vapor-based processes such as Pulsed Laser Deposition. His current interest include the fabrication of halide perovskite-based optoelectronic devices such as color conversion layers for microLEDs, perovskite-based LEDs, and photovoltaic solar cells.