Changes in near-bandgap photoluminescence in lead halide CsPbBr3 perovskite subjected to extreme conditions
Abstract
Inorganic halide perovskites are promising materials for implementation in next-generation optoelectronics. Their mechanical sustainability is crucially important for their successful industrial use. Herein, using the example of monoclinic perovskite CsPbBr3, we demonstrate that its photoluminescence (PL) characteristics are well preserved even after multiple phase transitions into disordered phases with much wider band gaps under the action of extreme conditions. We subjected a single crystal of CsPbBr3 to multiple high-pressure treatments of up to 12 GPa, which underwent phase transitions into disordered phases, and measured the temperature-dependent near-bandgap PL of both the pristine and treated samples down to 7 K. While the PL characteristics of both the samples were rather similar, the high-pressure-treated sample demonstrated a small increase in its band-gap, a more significant widening of its band gap with increasing temperature, a decrease in Rashba splitting and modifications in its broad defect PL band. We showed that thermal expansion of the crystal lattice and exciton–phonon interactions cannot explain the above-mentioned significant widening of the energy gap with an increase in temperature in the high-pressure-treated sample. However, it can be explained by the appearance of an additional electron–phonon coupling mechanism, resulting from octahedral tilting and small structural distortions. Our findings suggest strong self-healing effects in CsPbBr3 perovskite, which allowed the restoration of its structural and optoelectronic properties after intense disordering.