Long-Lived Dark Exciton Emission in Mn-Doped CsPbCl3 Perovskite Nanocrystals

Publication date

2019

Authors

Xu, KehuiISNI 0000000507893494
Vliem, Jara FelineORCID 0000-0002-9407-5032ISNI 000000050777994X
Meijerink, AndriesISNI 000000039216731X

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The unusual temperature dependence of exciton emission decay in CsPbX3 perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) attracts considerable attention. Upon cooling, extremely short (sub-ns) lifetimes were observed and were explained by an inverted bright–dark state splitting. Here, we report temperature-dependent exciton lifetimes for CsPbCl3 NCs doped with 0–41% Mn2+. The exciton emission lifetime increases upon cooling from 300 to 75 K. Upon further cooling, a strong and fast sub-ns decay component develops. However, the decay is strongly biexponential and also a weak, slow decay component is observed with a ∼40–50 ns lifetime below 20 K. The slow component has a ∼5–10 times stronger relative intensity in Mn-doped NCs compared to that in undoped CsPbCl3 NCs. The temperature dependence of the slow component resembles that of CdSe and PbSe quantum dots with an activation energy of ∼19 meV for the dark–bright state splitting. Based on our observations, we propose an alternative explanation for the short, sub-ns exciton decay time in CsPbX3 NCs. Slow bright–dark state relaxation at cryogenic temperatures gives rise to almost exclusively bright state emission. Incorporation of Mn2+ or high magnetic fields enhances the bright–dark state relaxation and allows for the observation of the long-lived dark state emission at cryogenic temperatures.

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Citation

Xu, K, Vliem, J F & Meijerink, A 2019, 'Long-Lived Dark Exciton Emission in Mn-Doped CsPbCl3 Perovskite Nanocrystals', Journal of Physical Chemistry C, vol. 123, no. 1, pp. 979-984. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b12035