Quantum dots for light technologies of the future
20 Apr 2026
LMU researchers improve stability and growth of perovskite quantum dots.
20 Apr 2026
LMU researchers improve stability and growth of perovskite quantum dots.
Perovskite quantum dots are considered promising materials for LEDs, photocatalysis, and future quantum light sources. Researchers at LMU have managed to master two major hurdles in working with these quantum dots: their stability in solution and precise control of their growth. Their results could open up new avenues for the processing and application of the materials, as the team reports in the Journal of the American Chemical Society and ACS Energy Letters.
Perovskite quantum dots are semiconductor crystals just a few nanometers in size. They consist of perovskite materials, usually a combination of metals and halides. Due to their extremely small dimensions, they exhibit quantum effects which strongly alter their optical and electronic characteristics. This allows them to absorb and re-emit light very efficiently.
Although perovskite quantum dots are comparatively easy to manufacture in solution, their soft ionic crystal lattices make them sensitive to many solvents. Particularly problematic are polar solvents like alcohols, in which quantum dots often disintegrate quite rapidly.
“A challenge to date has been keeping the quantum dots stable without impairing their structural and optical properties,” says Dr. Quinten Akkerman from the Nano-Institute Munich and the Faculty of Physics at LMU. Together with his team, Akkerman has developed a strategy to get around these limitations.
The scientists used so-called Gemini ligands, which form a stable molecular shell around the quantum dots. They bind with their charged groups to the surface of the quantum dots, while at the same time their structure forms a polar external surface. This allows the quantum dots to disperse in a stable manner in polar solvents like ethanol. The ligand layer remains exceptionally thin at around 0.7 nanometers, such that the optical properties of the quantum dots are preserved.
The stabilized quantum dots continue to exhibit high photoluminescence quantum yields and remain preserved in solution for long periods of time. At the same time, they can now be processed in so-called green solvents – an advantage for future manufacturing processes in optoelectronics.
In a second study, the team addressed the question of how to precisely control the size and structure of perovskite quantum dots. These properties determine what color and intensity the quantum dots emit.
Akkerman’s team developed a method by which the formation of new seed crystals is specifically suppressed. Instead, existing quantum dots grow in a controlled manner. This becomes possible through precise coordination of the reaction conditions and the ligands employed, which influence the reaction kinetics.
With a multi-stage injection strategy, the researchers were able to control the growth of the quantum dots over longer periods. They even achieved sub-unit-cell precision – that is to say, with a precision smaller than an individual crystal lattice cell.
The quantum dots generated in this fashion exhibit particularly narrow size distribution and stable optical properties. Such controlled structures are an important precondition for use in LEDs or future quantum light applications.
“Together, the two studies provide new approaches for solving challenges relating to perovskite quantum dots,” says Akkerman. “While the new ligand chemistry improves their processing and stability, the precise control of their growth enables precise tuning of their optical properties.” This opens up new possibilities for applications in optoelectronics and future quantum light technologies.
Gahlot, K., Ederle, D., Stickel, L. S., Döblinger, M., & Akkerman, Q. A.: Unlocking sub-unit cell precision overgrowth in CsPbBr₃ quantum dots. Journal of the American Chemical Society 2026.
He, F., Stickel, L. S., Döblinger, M., & Akkerman, Q. A.: Polar opposites: Ligand-mediated polarity inversion for perovskite quantum dots with sub-nanometer ligand shells. ACS Energy Letters 2026.