Colloidal halide perovskite nanocrystals of CsPbCl doped with Yb have demonstrated remarkably high sensitized photoluminescence quantum yields (PLQYs), approaching 200%, attributed to a picosecond quantum-cutting process in which one photon absorbed by the nanocrystal generates two photons emitted by the Yb dopants. This quantum-cutting process is thought to involve a charge-neutral defect cluster within the nanocrystal's internal volume. We demonstrate that Yb-doped CsPbCl nanocrystals can be converted postsynthetically to Yb-doped CsPb(ClBr ) nanocrystals without compromising the desired high PLQYs. Nanocrystal energy gaps can be tuned continuously from E ≈ 3.06 eV (405 nm) in CsPbCl down to E ≈ 2.53 eV (∼490 nm) in CsPb(ClBr) while retaining a constant PLQY above 100%. Reducing E further causes a rapid drop in PLQY, interpreted as reflecting an energy threshold for quantum cutting at approximately twice the energy of the YbF → F absorption threshold. These data demonstrate that very high quantum-cutting energy efficiencies can be achieved in Yb-doped CsPb(ClBr ) nanocrystals, offering the possibility to circumvent thermalization losses in conventional solar technologies. The presence of water during anion exchange is found to have a deleterious effect on the Yb PLQYs but does not affect the nanocrystal shapes or morphologies, or even reduce the excitonic PLQYs of analogous undoped CsPb(ClBr ) nanocrystals. These results provide valuable information relevant to the development and application of these unique materials for spectral-shifting solar energy conversion technologies.

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