Resonantly Pumped Bright-Triplet Exciton Lasing in Cesium Lead Bromide Perovskitesopen access
- Authors
- Ying, Guanhua; Farrow, Tristan; Jana, Atanu; Shao, Hanbo; Im, Hyunsik; Osokin, Vitaly; Baek, Seung Bin; Alanazi, Mutibah; Karmakar, Sanjit; Mukherjee, Manas; Park, Youngsin; Taylor, Robert A.
- Issue Date
- 15-Sep-2021
- Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
- Keywords
- perovskites; nanocrystals; lasing triplet exciton; photoluminescence
- Citation
- ACS PHOTONICS, v.8, no.9, pp 2699 - 2704
- Pages
- 6
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- ACS PHOTONICS
- Volume
- 8
- Number
- 9
- Start Page
- 2699
- End Page
- 2704
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/4431
- DOI
- 10.1021/acsphotonics.1c00720
- ISSN
- 2330-4022
2330-4022
- Abstract
- The surprising recent observation of highly emissive triplet-states in lead halide perovskites accounts for their orders-of-magnitude brighter optical signals and high quantum efficiencies compared to other semiconductors. This makes them attractive for future optoelectronic applications, especially in bright low-threshold nanolasers. While nonresonantly pumped lasing from all-inorganic lead-halide perovskites is now well-established as an attractive pathway to scalable low-power laser sources for nano-optoelectronics, here we showcase a resonant optical pumping scheme on a fast triplet-state in CsPbBr3 nanocrystals. The scheme allows us to realize a polarized triplet-laser source that dramatically enhances the coherent signal by 1 order of magnitude while suppressing noncoherent contributions. The result is a source with highly attractive technological characteristics, including a bright and polarized signal and a high stimulated-to-spontaneous emission signal contrast that can be filtered to enhance spectral purity. The emission is generated by pumping selectively on a weakly confined excitonic state with a Bohr radius similar to 10 nm in the nanocrystals. The exciton fine-structure is revealed by the energy-splitting resulting from confinement in nanocrystals with tetragonal symmetry. We use a linear polarizer to resolve 2-fold nondegenerate sublevels in the triplet exciton and use photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy to determine the energy of the state before pumping it resonantly.
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Collections - College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > Division of System Semiconductor > 1. Journal Articles

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