Lead halide perovskite nanocrystals are promising materials
for
classical and quantum light emission. To understand these outstanding
properties, a thorough analysis of the band-edge exciton emission
is needed, which is not reachable in ensemble and room-temperature
studies because of broadening effects. Here, we report on a cryogenic-temperature
study of the photoluminescence of single CsPbBr3 nanocrystals
in the intermediate quantum confinement regime. We reveal the size-dependence
of the spectral features observed: the bright triplet exciton energy
splittings, the trion and biexciton binding energies, and the optical
phonon replica spectrum. In addition, we show that bright triplet
energy splittings are consistent with a pure exchange model and that
the variety of polarization properties and spectra recorded can be
rationalized simply by considering the orientation of the emitting
dipoles and the populations of the emitting states.