Emissive Surface Traps Lead to Asymmetric Photoluminescence Line Shape in Spheroidal CsPbBr3 Quantum Dots
The morphology of quantum dots plays an important role in governing their photophysics. Here, we explore the photoluminescence of spheroidal CsPbBr3 quantum dots synthesized via the room-temperature trioctlyphosphine oxide/PbBr2 method. Despite photoluminescence quantum yields nearing 100%, these sp...
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Zusammenfassung: | The morphology of quantum dots plays an important role in governing their
photophysics. Here, we explore the photoluminescence of spheroidal CsPbBr3
quantum dots synthesized via the room-temperature trioctlyphosphine oxide/PbBr2
method. Despite photoluminescence quantum yields nearing 100%, these spheroidal
quantum dots exhibit an elongated red photoluminescence tail not observed in
typical cubic quantum dots synthesized via hot injection. We explore this
elongated red tail through structural and optical characterization including
small-angle x-ray scattering, transmission electron microscopy and
time-resolved, steady-state, and single quantum dot photoluminescence. From
these measurements we conclude that the red tail originates from emissive
surface traps. We hypothesize that these emissive surface traps are located on
the (111) surfaces and show that the traps can be passivated by adding
phenethyl ammonium bromide, resulting in a more symmetric line shape |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.05194 |