4.8 Article

Manipulating efficient light emission in two-dimensional perovskite crystals by pressure-induced anisotropic deformation

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 5, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aav9445

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education via Tier 2 grant [MOE2015-T2-1-047]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11504267, 11604243]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin [16JCQNJC01600]
  4. Tianjin Municipal Education Commission Scientific Research project [2018KJ151]
  5. Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship program of the Nanyang Technological University
  6. COMPRES through the Partnership for Extreme Crystallography (PX2) project, under NSF [EAR 11-57758]
  7. Singapore Ministry of Education via Tier 1 grants [RG 113/16, RG 194/17]

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The hybrid nature and soft lattice of organolead halide perovskites render their structural changes and optical properties susceptible to external driving forces such as temperature and pressure, remarkably different from conventional semiconductors. Here, we investigate the pressure-induced optical response of a typical two-dimensional perovskite crystal, phenylethylamine lead iodide. At a moderate pressure within 3.5 GPa, its photoluminescence red-shifts continuously, exhibiting an ultrabroad energy tunability range up to 320 meV in the visible spectrum, with quantum yield remaining nearly constant. First-principles calculations suggest that an out-of-plane quasi-uniaxial compression occurs under a hydrostatic pressure, while the energy is absorbed by the reversible and elastic tilting of the benzene rings within the long-chain ligands. This anisotropic structural deformation effectively modulates the quantum confinement effect by 250 meV via barrier height lowering. The broad tunability within a relatively low pressure range will expand optoelectronic applications to a new paradigm with pressure as a tuning knob.

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