Sn-based perovskite light-emitting diodes have attracted considerable attention due to their environmentally friendly properties and potential for second near-infrared window emission. However, intrinsic self-p-doping and high hole mobility of Sn-based perovskites lead to excessive hole injection under high current densities, causing severe hole dissipation and hindering the achievement of high efficiency at high radiance. Here, we present a grain morphology modulation strategy to optimize electron-hole injection and recombination dynamics. By introducing a growth regulator, perovskite grain morphology remarkably transforms from low-lying dendritic structures to elongated island-like formations, which restricts hole over-injection and spatially confines the recombination zone deeper into perovskite bulk. Consequently, optimal devices achieve an external quantum efficiency of 10.7% and a high radiance of 173 W sr-1 m-2, with NIR-II emission at 963 nm. Furthermore, the devices demonstrate low-efficiency roll-off, achieving an external quantum efficiency of 8.1% at a high radiance of 153.6 W sr-1 m-2. Guan et al. report a molecular regulator to control crystallization kinetics in Sn-based perovskite, resulting in elongated island-like grain structure that regulates charge injection and recombination, enabling NIR-II LEDs with efficiency of 10.7%, peak radiance of 173 W sr-1 m-2, and operational lifetime of 1,378 min.
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Xiang Guan
Yuqing Li
Y A N G A N Su
Nature Communications
Fudan University
Huaqiao University
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Guan et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fc2c1f8b49bacb8b347bb6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-72625-z