A High-Rigidity Organic-Inorganic Metal Halide Hybrid Enabling Reversible and Enhanced Self-Trapped Exciton Emission under High Pressure

Nano Lett. 2023 Aug 23;23(16):7599-7606. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c02205. Epub 2023 Aug 2.

Abstract

Zero-dimensional organic-inorganic metal halide hybrids provide ideal bulk-crystal platforms for exploring the pressure engineering of electron-phonon coupling (EPC) and self-trapped exciton (STE) emission at the molecular level. However, the low stiffness of inorganic clusters hinders the reversible tuning of these physical properties. Herein, we designed a Sb3+-doped metal halide with a high emission yield (89.4%) and high bulk modulus (35 GPa) that enables reversible and enhanced STE emission (20-fold) under pressure. The high lattice rigidity originates from the corner-shared cage-structured inorganic tetramers and ring-shaped organic ligands. Further, we reveal that the pressure-enhanced emission regime below 4.5 GPa is owing to the lattice hardening and preferably EPC strength reducing, while the pressure-insensitive emission regime within 4.5-8.5 GPa results from the enhanced intercluster Coulombic attraction force that resists intracluster compression. These results provide insights into the structure-property relation and molecular engineering of zero-dimensional metal halides toward wide-band and pressure-sensitive light sources.

Keywords: high pressure; metal halide hybrids; self-trapped exciton emission; tetramer cluster; zero-dimensional materials.