We report on optical spectroscopy (photoluminescence and photoluminescence excitation) on twodimensional self-organized layers of (C6H5C2H4 − N H3)2P bI4 perovskite. Temperature and excitation power dependance of the optical spectra gives a new insight into the excitonic and phononic properties of this hybrid organic/inorganic semiconductor. In particular, exciton-phonon interaction is found to be more than one order of magnitude higher than in GaAs QWs. As a result, photoluminescence emission lines have to be interpreted in the framework of a polaron model. PACS numbers: Valid PACS appear hereOptical properties of soft materials have attracted much attention for years thanks to their potential applications in optoelectronics devices. In particular, these last years, an increasing number of studies are dedicated on hybrid organic-inorganic materials[1], due to the possibility of combining the properties both of inorganic materials (high mobility, electrical pumping, band engineering) and of organic materials (low cost technology, high luminescence quantum yield at room temperature). In this context, organic-inorganic perovkites, having a chemical formula (R − NH3) 2 MX 4 where R is an organic chain, M is a metal and X a halogen, represent a natural hybrid system. Such perovskites present a great flexibility in their optical properties: the spectral position of the excitonic transitions can be tailored by substituting different halides X [2, 3], the photoluminescence efficiency can be tailored by changing the organic part R [4]. This kind of perovskites has been studied both in the framework of fundamental studies [2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24] and of applications in optoelectronic as the active material in a distributed feedback laser for example [25]. Recently the strong coupling regime between the perovskite exciton and the optical mode of a Pérot-Fabry microcavity has been demonstrated at room temperature in the UV range [5] and in the visible range [6,7]. The physical properties of these new polaritons have now to be investigated. In particular, the demonstration of polariton-polariton interactions which lead to polariton scattering would be a breakthrough for the physics of these new devices in the context of the low threshold polariton lasers [26,27,28]. To evaluate these possibilities, a good knowledge of the perovskite material electronic properties is needed. As an example, the energy of the phonons and the strength of the electron-phonon coupling will indicate whether an efficient relaxation of perovskite polaritons is conceivable. Additionally, the origin of the different perosvkite luminescence lines has to be clarified to improve the knowledge about the exciton which couples to the cavity mode. .In this paper, we report on the optical properties of a particular perovskite molecule, namely [bi-(phenethylammonium) tetraiodoplumbate]: (C 6 H 5 C 2 H 4 − N H 3 ) 2 − P bI 4 (named PEPI), absorbing and emitting in the green part of the visible range. Photoluminescence (PL) ...
The authors have realized a Pérot-Fabry microcavity containing a two-dimensional layered perovskite-type semiconductor, (C6H5C2H4–NH3)2PbI4, between a dielectric mirror and a metallic mirror. A strong coupling regime between the perovskite exciton and the confined photon mode has been evidenced at room temperature from angular-resolved reflectivity experiments. An anticrossing of 140meV is observed between the excitonic and cavity modes. (C6H5C2H4–NH3)2PbI4 having a self-organized multiple quantum well structure, they have determined the oscillator strength per quantum well of this structure: 4×1013cm−2, which is one order of magnitude higher than in conventional inorganic quantum wells.
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