Abstract
Through structural and optical studies of a series of two-dimensional hybrid perovskites, we show that broadband emission upon near-ultraviolet excitation is common to (001) lead-bromide perovskites. Importantly, we find that the relative intensity of the broad emission correlates with increasing out-of-plane distortion of the Pb-(μ-Br)-Pb angle in the inorganic sheets. Temperature-and power-dependent photoluminescence data obtained on a representative (001) perovskite support an intrinsic origin to the broad emission from the bulk material, where photogenerated carriers cause excited-state lattice distortions mediated through electron-lattice coupling. In contrast, most inorganic phosphors contain extrinsic emissive dopants or emissive surface sites. The design rules established here could allow us to systematically optimize white-light emission from layered hybrid perovskites by fine-tuning the bulk crystal structure.
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CITATION STYLE
Smith, M. D., Jaffe, A., Dohner, E. R., Lindenberg, A. M., & Karunadasa, H. I. (2017). Structural origins of broadband emission from layered Pb-Br hybrid perovskites. Chemical Science, 8(6), 4497–4504. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7sc01590a
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