Strong fluorescence blinking of large-size all-inorganic perovskite nano-spheres

  • Binbin Zhao
  • , Liqing Zhu
  • , Liaoxin Sun*
  • , Shaowei Wang
  • , Jian Lu
  • , Jian Zhang
  • , Qi Han
  • , Hongxing Dong
  • , Bing Tang
  • , Beier Zhou
  • , Feng Liu
  • , Xuechu Shen
  • , Wei Lu
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

We demonstrated strong fluorescence blinking on large all-inorganic perovskite (CsPbBr3) nano-spheres. By performing (time-resolved) micro-photoluminescence (μ-PL) measurements, the unique blinking characteristics of the as-grown nano-spheres with diameters of hundred nanometers, are clearly observed. Blinking has no obvious on/off states, which is different from the blinking characteristics of quantum dots. It is believed that the blinking of fluorescence is caused by metastable defect-induced trapping of carriers on the surface of the nano-spheres, because dramatically suppressed fluorescence blinking and the decay rates of ultrafast carriers are realized by surface passivation of the nano-spheres. Surface defects are closely related to the ambient atmosphere, which has been further confirmed by PL measurements of the as-grown nano-spheres in vacuum. Additionally, we also found that the fluorescence blinking was significantly suppressed as the sample size increased, which can be attributed to the large-size induced average effect on fluorescence blinking. These results may be important for understanding the mechanism of the fluorescence blinking of perovskite materials and for developing optical devices with good fluorescence stability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number215204
JournalNanotechnology
Volume31
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 May 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • All-inorganic perovskite
  • CsPbBr nano-spheres
  • Fluorescence blinking
  • Surface defect state
  • Surface passivation

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