Literature DB >> 29461806

White-Light Emission from Layered Halide Perovskites.

Matthew D Smith1, Hemamala I Karunadasa1.   

Abstract

With nearly 20% of global electricity consumed by lighting, more efficient illumination sources can enable massive energy savings. However, effectively creating the high-quality white light required for indoor illumination remains a challenge. To accurately represent color, the illumination source must provide photons with all the energies visible to our eye. Such a broad emission is difficult to achieve from a single material. In commercial white-light sources, one or more light-emitting diodes, coated by one or more phosphors, yield a combined emission that appears white. However, combining emitters leads to changes in the emission color over time due to the unequal degradation rates of the emitters and efficiency losses due to overlapping absorption and emission energies of the different components. A single material that emits broadband white light (a continuous emission spanning 400-700 nm) would obviate these problems. In 2014, we described broadband white-light emission upon near-UV excitation from three new layered perovskites. To date, nine white-light-emitting perovskites have been reported by us and others, making this a burgeoning field of study. This Account outlines our work on understanding how a bulk material, with no obvious emissive sites, can emit every color of the visible spectrum. Although the initial discoveries were fortuitous, our understanding of the emission mechanism and identification of structural parameters that correlate with the broad emission have now positioned us to design white-light emitters. Layered hybrid halide perovskites feature anionic layers of corner-sharing metal-halide octahedra partitioned by organic cations. The narrow, room-temperature photoluminescence of lead-halide perovskites has been studied for several decades, and attributed to the radiative recombination of free excitons (excited electron-hole pairs). We proposed that the broad white emission we observed primarily stems from exciton self-trapping. Here, the exciton couples strongly to the lattice, creating transient elastic lattice distortions that can be viewed as "excited-state defects". These deformations stabilize the exciton affording a broad emission with a large Stokes shift. Although material defects very likely contribute to the emission width, our mechanistic studies suggest that the emission mostly arises from the bulk material. Ultrafast spectroscopic measurements support self-trapping, with new, transient, electronic states appearing upon photoexcitation. Importantly, the broad emission appears common to layered Pb-Br and Pb-Cl perovskites, albeit with a strong temperature dependence. Although the emission is attributed to light-induced defects, it still reflects changes in the crystal structure. We find that greater out-of-plane octahedral tilting increases the propensity for the broad emission, enabling synthetic control over the broad emission. Many of these perovskites have color rendering abilities that exceed commercial requirements and mixing halides affords both "warm" and "cold" white light. The most efficient white-light-emitting perovskite has a quantum efficiency of 9%. Improving this value will make these phosphors attractive for solid-state lighting, particularly as large-area coatings that can be deposited inexpensively. The emission mechanism can also be extended to other low-dimensional systems. We hope this Account aids in expanding the phase space of white-light emitters and controlling their exciton dynamics by the synthetic, spectroscopic, theoretical, and engineering communities.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 29461806     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.7b00433

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  37 in total

1.  Yb3+ and Yb3+/Er3+ Doping for Near-Infrared Emission and Improved Stability of CsPbCl3 Nanocrystals.

Authors:  Xiangtong Zhang; Yu Zhang; Xiaoyu Zhang; Wenxu Yin; Yu Wang; Hua Wang; Min Lu; Zhiyang Li; Zhiyong Gu; William W Yu
Journal:  J Mater Chem C Mater       Date:  2018-08-29       Impact factor: 7.393

2.  Hierarchical Assemblies of Supramolecular Coordination Complexes.

Authors:  Sougata Datta; Manik Lal Saha; Peter J Stang
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2018-08-22       Impact factor: 22.384

Review 3.  Lead-Free Halide Perovskites for Light Emission: Recent Advances and Perspectives.

Authors:  Xin Li; Xupeng Gao; Xiangtong Zhang; Xinyu Shen; Min Lu; Jinlei Wu; Zhifeng Shi; Vicki L Colvin; Junhua Hu; Xue Bai; William W Yu; Yu Zhang
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 16.806

4.  Color-tunable persistent luminescence in 1D zinc-organic halide microcrystals for single-component white light and temperature-gating optical waveguides.

Authors:  Bo Zhou; Dongpeng Yan
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-05-25       Impact factor: 9.969

5.  Multifunctional Quaternary Phosphorus/Bromoargentate Hybrids: The Achievement of Greenish Blue Luminescence, Repeatable Photocurrent Responses and Durable Antimicrobial Activities with Enhanced Water Stability.

Authors:  Jing-Bo Liu; Qiao-Jun Zhang; Jian-Zhi Liu; Wen-Ting Zhang; Yi Li; Hao-Hong Li; Zhi-Rong Chen; Da-Li Zheng
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2020-08-19

6.  Infrared-pump electronic-probe of methylammonium lead iodide reveals electronically decoupled organic and inorganic sublattices.

Authors:  Peijun Guo; Arun Mannodi-Kanakkithodi; Jue Gong; Yi Xia; Constantinos C Stoumpos; Duyen H Cao; Benjamin T Diroll; John B Ketterson; Gary P Wiederrecht; Tao Xu; Maria K Y Chan; Mercouri G Kanatzidis; Richard D Schaller
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2019-01-29       Impact factor: 14.919

7.  Pressure-Induced Broadband Emission of 2D Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Perovskite (C6H5C2H4NH3)2PbBr4.

Authors:  Long Zhang; Lianwei Wu; Kai Wang; Bo Zou
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2018-11-24       Impact factor: 16.806

Review 8.  Materials nanoarchitectonics at two-dimensional liquid interfaces.

Authors:  Katsuhiko Ariga; Michio Matsumoto; Taizo Mori; Lok Kumar Shrestha
Journal:  Beilstein J Nanotechnol       Date:  2019-07-30       Impact factor: 3.649

9.  Highly Emissive Self-Trapped Excitons in Fully Inorganic Zero-Dimensional Tin Halides.

Authors:  Bogdan M Benin; Dmitry N Dirin; Viktoriia Morad; Michael Wörle; Sergii Yakunin; Gabriele Rainò; Olga Nazarenko; Markus Fischer; Ivan Infante; Maksym V Kovalenko
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2018-07-30       Impact factor: 15.336

10.  Pressure-induced emission of cesium lead halide perovskite nanocrystals.

Authors:  Zhiwei Ma; Zhun Liu; Siyu Lu; Lingrui Wang; Xiaolei Feng; Dongwen Yang; Kai Wang; Guanjun Xiao; Lijun Zhang; Simon A T Redfern; Bo Zou
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-10-29       Impact factor: 14.919

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