Theory and Experiments of Pressure-Tunable Broadband Light Emission from Self-Trapped Excitons in Metal Halide Crystals
Shenyu Dai, Xinxin Xing, Viktor G. Hadjiev, Zhaojun Qin, Tian Tong,, Guang Yang, Chong Wang, Lijuan Hou, Liangzi Deng, Zhiming Wang, Guoying Feng, and Jiming Bao

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical model and experimental validation for pressure-tunable broadband light emission from self-trapped excitons in metal halide crystals, revealing new insights into electron-phonon interactions.
Contribution
The work introduces a predictive theoretical model for pressure effects on STE emission and demonstrates its application to 2D CsPb2Br5 crystals with experimental validation.
Findings
Broadband photoluminescence with pressure tuning observed in CsPb2Br5
Theoretical and experimental agreement on constant bandwidth and linearly increasing energy below 2 GPa
Most STE emissions show a blue-shift under pressure, aligning with the model.
Abstract
Hydrostatic pressure has been commonly applied to tune broadband light emissions from self-trapped excitons (STE) in perovskites for producing white light and study of basic electron-phonon interactions. However, a general theory is still lacking to understand pressure-driven evolution of STE emissions. In this work we first identify a theoretical model that predicts the effect of hydrostatic pressure on STE emission spectrum, we then report the observation of extremely broadband photoluminescence emission and its wide pressure spectral tuning in 2D indirect bandgap CsPb2Br5 crystals. An excellent agreement is found between the theory and experiment on the peculiar experimental observation of STE emission with a nearly constant spectral bandwidth but linearly increasing energy with pressure below 2 GPa. Further analysis by the theory and experiment under higher pressure reveals that two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPerovskite Materials and Applications · Optical properties and cooling technologies in crystalline materials · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
