Confinement of all-inorganic perovskite quantum dots assembled in metal-organic frameworks for ultrafast scintillator application.
Cewei RenZhanpeng LiLu HuangXinlin XiongZiqi NieYun-Ling YangWenqing ZhuWeiguang YangLinjun WangPublished in: Nanoscale (2022)
Nucleation and growth of quantum dots (QDs) are thermodynamic processes driven by the total Gibbs free energy change (Δ G ). We discuss the nucleation and growth theory of perovskite quantum dots (PeQDs) inside a metal-organic framework (MOF) as a strong constraint framework, which can effectively confine the size of QDs below 3 nm and achieve a scintillator with an ultra-fast transient lifetime of fluorescence. Therefore, based on the requirements for the optical properties of ultra-fast scintillation materials, two kinds of suitable MOFs (UiO-67-bpy and MIL-101(Cr)) were selected for synthesis. The method of 'ship-in-bottle' was adopted to embed perovskite quantum dots CsPbBrCl 2 into MOF cages to form PeQDs@MOF composite materials, which is different from the one-pot method. In order to further improve the stability of PeQDs@MOF, polystyrene was used to cure the composite scintillator, which can resist exposure to UV light and withstand the ISO level 4 test, with the fastest transient lifetime of 2.13 ns and a fluorescence emission wavelength of 445 nm.