Water-mediated optical and morphological tuning of highly stable orange-emitting Mn-doped perovskite for white light-emission
- Authors
- Cho, Sangeun; Sree, Vijaya Gopalan; Fulari, Akash, V; Park, Sanghyuk; Mei, Ming; Kim, Minju; Jana, Atanu; Das, Deblina; Im, Hyunsik; Kyhm, Kwangseuk; Taylor, Robert A.
- Issue Date
- Feb-2025
- Publisher
- Elsevier Inc.
- Keywords
- Ligand-assisted reprecipitation; Nanostructured orange-emitting perovskite; Mn doping; High stability; Warm-white LED
- Citation
- Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, v.680, pp 215 - 225
- Pages
- 11
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
- Volume
- 680
- Start Page
- 215
- End Page
- 225
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/57827
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jcis.2024.10.193
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
1095-7103
- Abstract
- The main challenges in the optical and morphological tuning of highly stable orange-emitting Mn-doped perovskite include achieving uniform dopant distribution, maintaining structural integrity under varying environmental conditions, and optimizing luminescent efficiency while minimizing non-radiative recombination pathways. This study presents a novel, one-step, water-induced ultrafast synthesis strategy for obtaining Mndoped mixed-halide perovskites at room temperature. This technique offers morphological control by varying the amount of water-based precursor, allowing the tuning of resulting nanostructures to produce nanoplatelets, nanocubes, or nanowires. In the growth mechanism, Mn2+ dopants affect the crystal structure by promoting stable growth and uniform doping at higher concentrations, while water improves ion dispersion, reaction kinetics, and passivation, facilitating optimal crystal growth and the formation of desired nanostructure morphologies. The synthesized Mn:CsPbBr3_xClx NCs form a highly stable colloidal solution with approximately 100 % emission stability for up to one year under ambient conditions and retain 98.9 % of its photoluminescence after aging at 85 degrees C for 200 h. We also explore the PL mechanism in Mn:CsPbBr3-xClx NCs, where temperature- dependent PL analysis reveals energy transfer from CsPbBr3-xClx exciton states to Mn2+-doped levels, enhancing PL intensity, with both exciton and Mn2+ emissions exhibiting a blue shift as the temperature increased from 6 K to 300 K, attributed to lattice expansion and electron-phonon interactions. A warm white light emission is achieved with excellent stability and an exceptionally wide color gamut coverage. The proposed strategy has the potential to enable large-scale synthesis and fabrication of highly stable perovskite devices for high-quality display and lighting applications.
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- Appears in
Collections - College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > ETC > 1. Journal Articles
- College of Natural Science > Department of Physics > 1. Journal Articles
- College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > Division of System Semiconductor > 1. Journal Articles

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