Abstract: | Commercial white light‐emitting diodes (LEDs) have the undesirable characteristics of blue‐rich emission and low color rendering index (CRI), while the constituent quantum dots (QDs) suffer from aggregation‐induced fluorescence quenching and poor stability. Herein, a strategy is developed to assemble tricolor QDs into a polysiloxane matrix using a polymer‐mediated hybrid approach whereby the hybrid composite exhibits a significant enhancement of aggregation‐dispersed emission, outstanding photostability, high thermal stability, and outstanding fluorescence recovery. Using the as‐prepared hybrid fluorescent materials, the fabricated LEDs exhibit solar spectrum‐simulated emission with adjustable Commission Internationale de L'Eclairage coordinates, correlated color temperature, and a recorded CRI of 97. Furthermore, they present no ultraviolet emission and weak blue emission, thus indicating an ideal healthy and high‐CRI white LED lighting source. |