Quantum Materials breaks Stokes-shift barrier in quantum dots, leading to brighter displays

March 18, 2015
"Strong-shift" QDs have consistent characteristics in high volumes.

Quantum Materials Corp. (San Marcos, TX; OTCQB:QTMM) says it has broken the Stokes-shift barrier that limits the performance of quantum dots (QDs) for displays, and is able to produce "strong-shift" QDs to consistent characteristics in high volumes. The company made the announcement at the opening of the second annual Quantum Dots Forum hosted by Smithers Apex (March 18; San Francisco, CA).

Named after Irish physicist George Stokes, the Stokes shift is the difference between a QD's peak excitation and peak emission wavelengths. Minimizing overlap between excitation and emission bands enhances the clarity and brightness of the fluorescing QD by avoiding re-absorption of emitted light into nearby QDs. Quantum Materials says that until now it has not been possible to produce a Stokes shift in QDs of up to 20 nm in quantities suitable for manufacturing applications, but Quantum Material's continuous-flow production process (which the company has patented) enables automated synthesis with the uniformity necessary for achieving precise characteristics for high-volume production of highly-driven strong-shift QDs.

Cadmium-free QDs
Quantum Materials says it is also making significant advances in cadmium-free QDs, which are currently in the evaluation stage at some large display manufacturers. In addition to ultrahigh-definition liquid-crystal displays, such QDs are also useful in solid-state lighting, solar photovoltaic power applications, advanced battery and energy storage, biotech imaging, and biomedical theranostics.

Quantum dots are easily integrated into industry-standard thin-film roll-to-roll inkjet and surface deposition technologies currently used in existing LCD display production lines, as illustrated in an informative video detailing cadmium-free quantum dot uses and benefits, which is also available for download at http://bit.ly/1KhSS9i for use with attribution.

Quantum Materials' wholly-owned subsidiary Solterra Renewable Technologies develops sustainable QD solar technology.

For more info on Quantum Materials, see http://www.qmcdots.com/

Source: GlobeNewswire

Sponsored Recommendations

Hexapod 6-DOF Active Optical Alignment Micro-Robots - Enablers for Advanced Camera Manufacturing

Dec. 18, 2024
Optics and camera manufacturing benefits from the flexibility of 6-Axis hexapod active optical alignment robots and advanced motion control software

Laser Assisted Wafer Slicing with 3DOF Motion Stages

Dec. 18, 2024
Granite-based high-performance 3-DOF air bearing nanopositioning stages provide ultra-high accuracy and reliability in semiconductor & laser processing applications.

Steering Light: What is the Difference Between 2-Axis Galvo Scanners and Single Mirror 2-Axis Scanners

Dec. 18, 2024
Advantages and limitations of different 2-axis light steering methods: Piezo steering mirrors, voice-coil mirrors, galvos, gimbal mounts, and kinematic mounts.

Free Space Optical Communication

Dec. 18, 2024
Fast Steering Mirrors (FSM) provide fine steering precision to support the Future of Laser Based Communication with LEO Satellites

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Laser Focus World, create an account today!