Quantum and dielectric confinement effects in 2D hybrid perovskites create excitons with a binding energy exceeding 150 meV. We exploit the large exciton binding energy to study exciton and carrier dynamics as well as electron-phonon coupling in hybrid perovskites using absorption and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopies. At temperatures below 75 K, we resolve splitting of the excitonic absorption and PL into multiple regularly-spaced resonances every 40-46 meV, consistent with electron-phonon coupling to phonons located on the organic cation. We also resolve resonances with a 14 meV spacing, in accord with coupling to phonons with mixed organic and inorganic character, and these assignments are supported by density-functional theory calculations. Hot exciton PL and time-resolved PL measurements show that vibrational relaxation occurs on a picosecond timescale competitive with that for PL. At temperatures above 75 K, excitonic absorption and PL exhibit homogeneous broadening. While absorption remains homogeneous, PL becomes inhomogeneous below 75K, which we speculate is caused by the formation and subsequent dynamics of a polaronic exciton.
We synthesize and characterize derivatives of the two-dimensional hybrid perovskite (2DHP) phenethylammonium lead iodide ((PEA)2PbI4) in which the para H on the cation is replaced with F, Cl, CH3, or Br. These substitutions increase the length of the cation but leave the cross-sectional area unchanged, resulting in structurally similar PbI4 2– frameworks with increasing interlayer spacing. Longer cations result in broader, blue-shifted excitonic absorption spectra with reduced or eliminated structure, indicating greater energetic disorder. Photoluminescence spectra are largely invariant and insensitive to cation length, suggesting polaron formation stabilizes a structural and electronic minimum. Temperature-dependent line width analysis reveals excitons couple to a vibration on the organic framework that is weakly sensitive to these cation substitutions, and Raman spectra and electronic structure calculations support the presence of such a cationic mode. Despite carriers being confined to the inorganic framework, the length of the organic cation alters the optical and electronic properties of 2DHPs.
We report a family of two-dimensional hybrid perovskites (2DHPs) based on phenethylammonium lead iodide ((PEA)2PbI4) that show complex structure in their lowtemperature excitonic absorption and photoluminescence (PL) spectra as well as hot exciton PL.We replace the 2-position (ortho) H on the phenyl group of the PEA cation with F, Cl, or Br to systematically increase the cation's cross-sectional area and mass and study changes in the excitonic structure. These single atom substitutions substantially change the observable number of and spacing between discrete resonances in the excitonic absorption and PL spectra and drastically increase the amount of hot exciton PL that violates Kasha's rule by over an order of magnitude. To fit the progressively larger cations, the inorganic framework distorts and is strained, reducing the Pb-I-Pb bond angles and increasing the 2DHP band gap. Correlation between the 2DHP structure and steady-state and time-resolved spectra suggests the complex structure of resonances arises from one or two manifolds of states, depending on the 2DHP Pb-I-Pb bond angle (as)symmetry, and the resonances within a manifold are regularly spaced with an energy separation that decreases as the mass of the cation increases. The uniform separation between resonances and the dynamics that show excitons can only relax to the next-lowest state are consistent with a vibronic progression caused by a vibrational mode on the cation. These
We find evidence for the formation and relaxation of large exciton polarons in 2D organic–inorganic hybrid perovskites. Using ps-scale time-resolved photoluminescence within the phenethylammonium lead iodide family of compounds, we identify a red shifting of emission that we associate with exciton polaron formation time scales of 3–10 ps. Atomic substitutions of the phenethylammonium cation allow local control over the structure of the inorganic lattice, and we show that the structural differences among materials strongly influence the exciton polaron relaxation process, revealing a polaron binding energy that grows larger (up to 15 meV) in more strongly distorted compounds.
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