Abstract

Supramolecularly assembled high-order supercrystals (SCs) help control the dielectric, electronic, and excitonic properties of semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) and quantum dots (QDs). Ligand-engineered perovskite NCs (PNCs) assemble into SCs showing shorter excitonic lifetimes than strongly dielectric PNC films showing long photoluminescence (PL) lifetimes and long-range carrier diffusion. Monodentate to bidentate ligand exchange on ≈ 8nm halide perovskite (APbX3 ; A:Cs/MA, X:Br/I) PNCs generates mechanically stable SCs with close-packed lattices, overlapping electronic wave functions, and higher dielectric constant, providing distinct excitonic properties from single PNCs or PNC films. From Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) images, time-resolved PL, and small-angle X-ray scattering, structurally and excitonically ordered large SCs are identified. An Sc shows a smaller spectral shift (<35 meV) than a PNC film (>100 meV), a microcrystal (>100 meV), or a bulk crystal (>100 meV). Also, the exciton lifetime (<10ns) of an SC is excitation power-independent in the single exciton regime 〈N〉<1, comparable to an isolated PNC. Therefore, bidentate-ligand-assisted SCs help overcome delayed exciton or carrier recombination in halide perovskite nanocrystal assemblies or films.

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