Metal halides perovskites, such as hybrid organic–inorganic CH3NH3PbI3, are newcomer optoelectronic materials that have attracted enormous attention as solution-deposited absorbing layers in solar cells with power conversion efficiencies reaching 20%. Herein we demonstrate a new avenue for halide perovskites by designing highly luminescent perovskite-based colloidal quantum dot materials. We have synthesized monodisperse colloidal nanocubes (4–15 nm edge lengths) of fully inorganic cesium lead halide perovskites (CsPbX3, X = Cl, Br, and I or mixed halide systems Cl/Br and Br/I) using inexpensive commercial precursors. Through compositional modulations and quantum size-effects, the bandgap energies and emission spectra are readily tunable over the entire visible spectral region of 410–700 nm. The photoluminescence of CsPbX3 nanocrystals is characterized by narrow emission line-widths of 12–42 nm, wide color gamut covering up to 140% of the NTSC color standard, high quantum yields of up to 90%, and radiative lifetimes in the range of 1–29 ns. The compelling combination of enhanced optical properties and chemical robustness makes CsPbX3 nanocrystals appealing for optoelectronic applications, particularly for blue and green spectral regions (410–530 nm), where typical metal chalcogenide-based quantum dots suffer from photodegradation.
Postsynthetic
chemical transformations of colloidal nanocrystals, such as ion-exchange
reactions, provide an avenue to compositional fine-tuning or to otherwise
inaccessible materials and morphologies. While cation-exchange is
facile and commonplace, anion-exchange reactions have not received
substantial deployment. Here we report fast, low-temperature, deliberately
partial, or complete anion-exchange in highly luminescent semiconductor
nanocrystals of cesium lead halide perovskites (CsPbX3,
X = Cl, Br, I). By adjusting the halide ratios in the colloidal nanocrystal
solution, the bright photoluminescence can be tuned over the entire
visible spectral region (410–700 nm) while maintaining high
quantum yields of 20–80% and narrow emission line widths of
10–40 nm (from blue to red). Furthermore, fast internanocrystal
anion-exchange is demonstrated, leading to uniform CsPb(Cl/Br)3 or CsPb(Br/I)3 compositions simply by mixing CsPbCl3, CsPbBr3, and CsPbI3 nanocrystals in
appropriate ratios.
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