Abstract

Broadband blue emission in zero-dimensional perovskites has received considerable attention, which is very important for the realization of stable blue-light emitters; however, the underlying formation mechanism remains unclear. Based on first-principles calculations, we have systematically studied the self-trapped excitons (STEs) behavior and luminescence properties in 0D-(DMA)4PbI6 perovskite. Our calculations show that there is a significant difference between the intrinsic STE luminescence mechanism (∼2.51eV) and experimental observations (∼2.70eV). In contrast, we found that the iodine vacancy (VI) is energetically accessible and exhibits a shallow charge transition level at ∼2.69eV (0/+1) above the valence band maximum, which provides the initial local well for the STEs formation. Moreover, the low electronic dimension synergistic Jahn-Teller distortion facilitates the formation of extrinsic excitons self-trapping. Further excited state electronic structure analysis and configuration coordinate diagram calculations confirmed that the broadband blue emission in 0D-(DMA)4PbI6 is the origin of VI-induced extrinsic STEs instead of intrinsic STEs. Therefore, our simulation results rationalize the experimental phenomena and provide important insights into the formation mechanism of STEs in low-dimensional perovskite systems.

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