Temperature dependent scintillation properties and mechanisms of (PEA)2PbBr4 single crystals

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

J.J. van Blaaderen (TU Delft - RST/Luminescence Materials)

Francesco Maddalena (Nanyang Technological University)

Cuong Dang (Nanyang Technological University)

Muhammad Danang Birowosuto (PORT Polish Center for Technology Development, Wroclaw)

P. Dorenbos (TU Delft - RST/Luminescence Materials)

Research Group
RST/Luminescence Materials
Copyright
© 2022 J.J. van Blaaderen, Francesco Maddalena, Cuong Dang, Muhammad Danang Birowosuto, P. Dorenbos
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2tc01483a
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 J.J. van Blaaderen, Francesco Maddalena, Cuong Dang, Muhammad Danang Birowosuto, P. Dorenbos
Research Group
RST/Luminescence Materials
Issue number
32
Volume number
10
Pages (from-to)
11598-11606
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Abstract

In this work the scintillation properties of PEA2PbBr4 are studied as function of temperature, accessing the potential use of these materials for low temperature applications. The scintillation properties and mechanism have been studied using a combination of temperature dependent photoluminescence emission and excitation, X-ray excited emission and decay measurements. At room temperature the X-ray excited emission is dominated by the 442 nm emission with a lifetime of 35.2 ns. Under UV-Vis photon excitation an additional emission peak is observed at 412 nm. At 10 K, both X-ray and UV-Vis photon excited emission spectra show a narrow emission peak at 412 nm and a broad emission band centred around 525 nm with a lifetime of 1.53 ns (24%) and 154 ns (76%) respectively. The exact nature of the observed emission peaks is not known. For this reason two potential mechanisms explaining the difference between UV-Vis photon and X-ray excitation and their temperature dependent emissions are explored. The total spectral intensity decreases to 72% of the intensity at room temperature at 10 K. It is suggested that the observed negative thermal quenching behaviour results from a combination of more self absorption and a higher degree of self trapped exciton formation under X-ray excitation. Based on the observed fast decay component at 10 K and light yield of 9400 photons per MeV at room temperature, showing only a 28% decrease at 10 K, could make this material potentially interesting for low temperature and fast timing applications.