Ruddlesden-Popper (RP) organic-inorganic halide perovskites have been attracting increasing attention for applications in high efficiency light emitting diodes (LEDs) due to their wider range of tunability, improved environmental stability, and higher exciton binding energy compared to more commonly studied 3D organic-inorganic halide perovskites. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] They have a general formula Aʹ 2 A n-1 B n X 3n+1 , where Aʹ is the bulky organic spacer cation, A is Cs + or a smaller organic cation capable of forming a 3D perovskite ABX 3 , B is a divalent metal cation (Pb, Sn), X is a halide anion, while n is the number of perovskite sheets between Aʹ spacer cations. A number of different RP perovskite materials have been reported to date, with the most commonly studied ones using butylammonium (BA) or phenethylammonium (PEA) spacer cations. [1] Thin films of a quasi-2D perovskite will commonly contain domains with different n. [3,6] Therefore, significant efforts in the study of Significant enhancement of the light emission in Ruddlesden-Popper organic-inorganic halide perovskites is obtained by antisolvent induced spontaneous formation of nanocrystals in an amorphous matrix. This morphology change results in the passivation of defects and significant enhancement of light emission and 16 times higher photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY), and it is applicable to different spacer cations. The use of trioctylphosphine oxide results in further defect passivation leading to an increase in PLQY (≈2.3 times), the suppression of lower energy emission in low temperature photoluminescence spectra, the dominance of radiative recombination, and the disappearance of thermal quenching of the luminescence. The proposed method offers a reproducible, controllable, and antisolvent-insensitive alternative to energy landscape engineering to utilize energy funneling phenomenon to achieve bright emission. Instead of facilitating fast energy transfer from lower to higher number of perovskite sheets to prevent nonradiative losses, it is demonstrated that defects can be effectively passivated via morphology control and the use of a passivating agent, so that bright emission can be obtained from single phase nanocrystals embedded in amorphous matrix, resulting in light emitting diodes with a maximum external quantum efficiency of 2.25%.
Ruddlesden-Popper PerovskitesThe ORCID identification number(s) for the author(s) of this article can be found under https://doi.www.advopticalmat.de Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China through Croatian-Chinese bilateral projects entitled "Insight into thermosalient phenomenon of molecular crystals-one step closer to revealing the jumping mystery using the high-temperature AFM and high-temperature FTIR" and "The study of highly stable and mixed cations organometallic trihalide perovskite materials and solar cells."