MRS Meetings and Events

 

EL10.04.08 2023 MRS Fall Meeting

Multicomponent Functional Superlattices Co-Assembled from Shape Anisotropic Lead Halide Perovskite Nanocrystals

When and Where

Nov 28, 2023
4:15pm - 4:30pm

Hynes, Level 3, Ballroom A

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Taras Sekh1,2,Gabriele Raino1,2,Ihor Cherniukh1,2,Etsuki Kobiyama1,3,Modestos Athanasiou4,Andreas Manoli4,Thomas Sheehan5,William Tisdale5,Thilo Stoeferle3,Rolf Erni2,Grigorios Itskos4,Maryna Bodnarchuk2,1,Maksym Kovalenko1,2

ETH Zürich1,Empa–Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology2,IBM Research-Zurich3,University of Cyprus4,Massachusetts Institute of Technology5

Abstract

Taras Sekh1,2,Gabriele Raino1,2,Ihor Cherniukh1,2,Etsuki Kobiyama1,3,Modestos Athanasiou4,Andreas Manoli4,Thomas Sheehan5,William Tisdale5,Thilo Stoeferle3,Rolf Erni2,Grigorios Itskos4,Maryna Bodnarchuk2,1,Maksym Kovalenko1,2

ETH Zürich1,Empa–Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology2,IBM Research-Zurich3,University of Cyprus4,Massachusetts Institute of Technology5
With the development of new approaches in synthetic chemistry over the last few decades, various colloidal nanocrystals were obtained in the monodisperse form, which, in turn, fostered the extensive research and application possibilities of novel nanomaterials. To this end, self-assembly of colloidal nanocrystals via a bottom-up approach holds great promise for creating metamaterials with programmable functionalities which originate from not only ensemble-average properties but also from diverse synergistic and collective effects, including conductivity enhancement, dipolar interactions, plasmonic couplings as well as collective light emission–superfluorescence [1]. The last was recently shown on the single-component perovskite nanocrystal superlattices [2]. Such peculiar optical properties, together with a high degree of monodispersity, size tunability, and shape anisotropy of perovskite nanocrystals, stimulated research in exploring multicomponent superlattices [3]. Thus, a whole plethora of superlattice types has become accessible, encompassing the superlattices comprised of perovskite nanocubes and spherical, truncated cuboid, or disc-shaped nanocrystals acting as spacers between fluorescent nanocrystals [4]. The superlattices can be fabricated as films on different flat substrates, including at the liquid-air interface, or as spherically confined 3-dimensional supraparticles [5]. A particular interest lies in studying superlattices containing a few light emitter types, wherein promising collective phenomena are expected to emerge. For such systems exemplified on lead perovskite nanocrystal superlattices, we observed the Foster-like energy transfer with accelerated exciton diffusion.<br/><br/>[1] Michael A. Boles <i>et al. Chem Rev. </i><b>2016</b>, 116, 11220-11289.<br/>[2] Gabriele Rainò <i>et al. Nature, </i><b>2018</b>, 563, 671-675.<br/>[3] Ihor Cherniukh <i>et al. Nature, </i><b>2021</b>, 593, 535-542.<br/>[4] Ihor Cherniukh <i>et al. </i><i>ACS Nano, </i><b>2021</b>, 15, 16488-16500.<br/>[5] Ihor Cherniukh <i>et al. ACS Nano, </i><b>2022</b>, 16, 7210-7232.

Keywords

metamaterial | perovskites | self-assembly

Symposium Organizers

Tae-Woo Lee, Seoul National University
Liberato Manna, Instituto Italiano di Tecnologia
Hedi Mattoussi, Florida State Univ
Vincent Rotello, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Symposium Support

Silver
Science Advances | AAAS

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature