Structural phase transitions and photoluminescence mechanism in a layer of 3D hybrid perovskite nanocrystals
Yuri D. Glinka, Rui Cai, Xian Gao, Dan Wu, Rui Chen, and Xiao Wei Sun

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that two-photon-excited photoluminescence spectroscopy can monitor structural phase transitions in 3D hybrid perovskite nanocrystals, revealing temperature-dependent phase instability and the influence of interfacial electric fields.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental evidence of structural phase transitions in MAPbX3 nanocrystals and explains the enhanced sensitivity of nonlinear PL spectroscopy to weak structural distortions.
Findings
Orthorhombic-to-tetragonal transition occurs between 70-140 K.
Interfacial electric fields extend phase instability up to 230 K.
Two-photon PL is more sensitive to structural changes than one-photon PL.
Abstract
Although the structural phase transitions in single-crystal hybrid methyl-ammonium (MA) lead halide perovskites (MAPbX3, X = Cl, Br, I) are common phenomena, they have never been observed in the corresponding nanocrystals. Here we demonstrate that two-photon-excited photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy is capable of monitoring the structural phase transitions in MAPbX3 nanocrystals because nonlinear susceptibilities govern the light absorption rates. We provide experimental evidence that the orthorhombic-to-tetragonal structural phase transition in a single layer of 20-nm-sized 3D MAPbBr3 nanocrystals is spread out within the 70 - 140 K range. This structural phase instability range arises because, unlike in single-crystal MAPbX3, free rotations of MA ions in the corresponding nanocrystals are no longer restricted by a long-range MA dipole order. The resulting configurational entropy…
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