Litcius/Paper detail

Collective Interactions of Quantum-Confined Excitons in Halide Perovskite Nanocrystal Superlattices

Shai Levy, O. Beer, Saar Shaek, Alexey Gorlach, Einav Scharf, Yonatan Ossia, Rotem Liran, Kobi Cohen, Rotem Strassberg, Ido Kaminer, Uri Banin, Yehonadav Bekenstein

2024ACS Nano26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Collective optical properties can emerge from an ordered ensemble of emitters due to interactions between the individual units. Superlattices of halide perovskite nanocrystals exhibit collective light emission, influenced by dipole-dipole interactions between simultaneously excited nanocrystals. This coupling changes both the emission energy and rate compared to the emission of uncoupled nanocrystals. We demonstrate how quantum confinement governs the nature of the coupling between the nanocrystals in the ensemble. The extent of confinement is modified by controlling the nanocrystal size or by compositional control over the Bohr radius. In superlattices made of weakly confined nanocrystals, the collective emission is red-shifted with a faster emission rate, showing the key characteristics of superfluorescence. In contrast, the collective emission of stronger quantum-confined nanocrystals is blue-shifted with a slower emission rate. Both types of collective emission exhibit correlative multiphoton emission bursts, showing distinct photon bunching emission statistics. The quantum confinement changes the preferred alignment of transition dipoles within the nanocrystal and switches the relative dipole orientation between neighbors, resulting in opposite collective optical behaviors. Our results extend these collective effects to relatively high temperatures and provide a better understanding of exciton interactions and collective emission phenomena at the solid state.

Topics & Concepts

NanocrystalQuantum dotExcitonExcited stateBohr radiusSuperlatticePerovskite (structure)DipoleMaterials sciencePurcell effectCondensed matter physicsChemical physicsSpontaneous emissionAtomic physicsMolecular physicsPhysicsNanotechnologyChemistryLaserQuantum mechanicsCrystallographyPerovskite Materials and ApplicationsQuantum Dots Synthesis And PropertiesLuminescence and Fluorescent Materials