Abstract

The optical response of excitons confined in characteristic nanostructures in layered metal tri-iodide crystals introduced by some irregular stackings from the bulk structures is reviewed. In BiI 3 a specific stacking fault takes place during crystal growth constructing macroscopic planar defects. In this space conspicuous localized exciton transitions occur below the intrinsic absorption edge. Another stacking disorder introduced by applying external stress in this crystal brings about a new nanostructure domain of symmetry D 3d different from that of bulk symmetry C 2 3i. The optical transitions due to new structures appear in the lower energy region as an absorption and luminescence line series. The similar nanostructures are induced in SbI 3 crystals under the hydrostatic pressure. In these nanostructures, the electronic structure is analyzed by a model based on the confined excitons in a nanoscale disk-like shape space. The magnetic field effect confirms the structure in the wave function-size scale. The nanoscale disk-like structure of BiI 3 in CdI 2 matrices is also obtained by a hot wall technique and mixed crystal annealing, which is realized by observing the size distribution with an electron microscope. In a BiI 3 disk in CdI 2 Stokes shifted photoluminescence bands appear. The Stokes shifts of the luminescence bands are understood by considering the size-dependent exciton-phonon interaction. In these nanostructures large optical nonlinearity under the intense laser field was obtained.

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