Systematic Study of the Synthesis of Monodisperse CsPbI Perovskite Nanoplatelets for Efficient Color-Pure Light Emitting Diodes.

Small

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and Center for Functional Photonics (CFP), City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, 999077, P. R. China.

Published: January 2025

Metal halide perovskite nanoplatelets (NPls) possess ultra-narrow photoluminescence (PL) bands tunable over the entire visible spectral range, which makes them promising for utilization in light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with spectrally pure emission colors. This calls for development of synthetic methods toward perovskite NPls with a high degree of control over both their thickness and lateral dimensions. A general strategy is developed to obtain such monodisperse CsPbI NPls through the control over the halide-to-lead ratio during heating-up reaction. The excess of iodine precursor changes the chemical equilibrium, thus yielding monodisperse (3 monolayers in thickness) CsPbI NPls whose PL width constitutes ≈22 nm, while the lateral dimensions of NPls are determined by choice of precursor and by the reaction temperature. Postsynthetic cation exchange on the A-site of the perovskite lattice allows for the tuning of the PL peak position, while simultaneous removal of the excess ligands and the surface passivation allows for improvement of the PL quantum yield to 96% and ensures superior stability of optical properties upon storage. Electroluminescent LEDs with the peak values are fabricated for the external quantum efficiency and luminance being 9.45% and 29800 cd m, respectively, and a narrow (≈26 nm) electroluminescence peak at 601 nm.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202408422DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

monodisperse cspbi
8
perovskite nanoplatelets
8
lateral dimensions
8
cspbi npls
8
npls
5
systematic study
4
study synthesis
4
synthesis monodisperse
4
perovskite
4
cspbi perovskite
4

Similar Publications

Systematic Study of the Synthesis of Monodisperse CsPbI Perovskite Nanoplatelets for Efficient Color-Pure Light Emitting Diodes.

Small

January 2025

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and Center for Functional Photonics (CFP), City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, 999077, P. R. China.

Metal halide perovskite nanoplatelets (NPls) possess ultra-narrow photoluminescence (PL) bands tunable over the entire visible spectral range, which makes them promising for utilization in light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with spectrally pure emission colors. This calls for development of synthetic methods toward perovskite NPls with a high degree of control over both their thickness and lateral dimensions. A general strategy is developed to obtain such monodisperse CsPbI NPls through the control over the halide-to-lead ratio during heating-up reaction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Optical gain of colloidal quantum dots (QDs) is often attained in the multiexciton regime, which strongly complicates their lasing applications as the gain lifetime is limited by nonradiative Auger recombination occurring typically on the picosecond time scale. In principle, low-threshold gain can be achieved if the gain-active emission has a sizable red shift compared to the absorption. But, this mechanism has been rarely observed in typical QDs featuring small Stokes shift due to their weak electron-phonon coupling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite their low band gap, the utility of CsPbI nanocrystals (NCs) in solar photovoltaic and optoelectronic applications is rather limited because of their phase instability and photoluminescence (PL) intermittency. Herein we show that phase-pure, monodispersed, stable and highly luminescent CsPbI NCs can be obtained by tweaking the conventional hot-injection method employing NHI as an additional precursor. Single-particle studies show a significant suppression of PL blinking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Environmentally stable lead halide perovskite nanostructures with engineered composition and morphology are attractive because of their exotic optical properties. Here, we report the synthesis of monodispersed (∼20 nm) CsPbI cubic perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) using edible olive oil as a solvent as well as a chelating reagent. Thereafter, bromide anion exchange reaction using the cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide surfactant in hexane is carried out at relatively lower temperatures to synthesize caesium lead halide perovskites with variable halide compositions and tunable band gaps.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!