News Release

Professor Jong-Soo Lee’s team at DGIST develops core technology of “direct photolithography” for ultra-high-resolution quantum dot displays

Peer-Reviewed Publication

DGIST (Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology)

Professor Jong-Soo Lee's Team

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Professor Jong-Soo Lee's Team

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Credit: Professor Jong-Soo Lee's Team

□ A research team led by Professor Jong-Soo Lee in the Department of Energy Science and Engineering at DGIST (President Kunwoo Lee) has developed a Direct Optical Lithography (DOL) technology that patterns Quantum Dots (QDs) at ultra-high resolution using only light, without photoresist. Through this, they also provided guidelines for selecting cross-linkers essential for fabricating high-performance QLEDs. This achievement is regarded as a core fundamental technology that can be applied to a wide range of optoelectronic devices, including micro-QLEDs, ultra-high-resolution displays, transparent electronic devices, and next-generation image sensors.

 

□ QDs are ultra-fine semiconductor particles about one hundred-thousandth the thickness of a human hair. Their emission color can be freely tuned by size, thereby making them a next-generation display material with outstanding color reproduction. However, conventional photoresist-based patterning processes face limitations such as complex procedures, reduced emission performance, and pattern deformation. In addition, inkjet printing and micro-contact printing are also constrained in terms of resolution and precision.

 

□ To address these limitations, the research team introduced a diazirine-based crosslinker, TDBA, which reacts to ultraviolet light (i-line, 365 nm). TDBA possesses both a “carboxylic acid functional group” that can directly bind to the surface of QDs and a diazirine structure that responds to light. With a single light exposure, it chemically bonds to the QDs to form ultra-fine patterns. Using this approach, the team successfully achieved ultra-high-resolution patterning at about 2 μm (6,350 DPI), while also ensuring excellent precision and stability.

 

□ In addition, following the patterning process, the team applied post-treatment using a thiol-based compound called “PETMP,” which passivated surface defects on the QDs, thereby further improving their photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY). QLED devices incorporating these post-treated QDs as the emitting layer achieved a maximum external efficiency of 10.3% and a maximum luminance of 99,369 cd/m², thereby demonstrating outstanding device performance. In addition, in semitransparent QLEDs utilizing R/G/B QDs, they verified the feasibility of double-sided emission, thus opening up possibilities for transparent display applications.

 

□ In addition to developing the fabrication technology, the team conducted an in-depth analysis of how the molecular structure of cross-linkers affects the optical and electrical properties of QDs. By using density functional theory (DFT), a quantum mechanical calculation method, the team compared TBBT, which contains sulfur (S) atoms, with BPDT, which does not, and discovered that BPDT exhibits higher conductivity, making it more advantageous for improving QLED performance. This finding is expected to serve as an important guideline for selecting optimal materials in the fabrication of high-resolution, high-performance QD displays.

 

□ Professor Jong-Soo Lee stated, “This research not only increases resolution, but also proposes a method for stable fabrication that preserves the intrinsic optical and electrical properties of QDs, along with clear criteria for material selection. We expect it will greatly accelerate the commercialization of next-generation displays such as AR and VR.”

 

□ This research was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea and the National Research Council of Science & Technology, in collaboration with DCT (CEO Hanil Jeong), a QD-specialized company, and Dr. Weon-Sik Chae’s team at the Korea Basic Science Institute. The results were published in Nano Letters (IF 9.1) and ACS Nano (IF 16.0), prestigious journals in the field of materials chemistry.

 

 - Corresponding Author E-mail Address : jslee@dgist.ac.kr


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