Coupling to octahedral tilts in halide perovskite nanocrystals induces phonon-mediated attractive interactions between excitons.
Nuri YazdaniMaryna I BodnarchukFederica BertolottiNorberto MasciocchiIna FurerajBurak GuzelturkBenjamin L CottsMarc E ZajacGabriele RainòMaximilian JansenSimon C BoehmeMaksym YaremaMing-Fu LinMichael KozinaAlexander H M ReidXiaozhe ShenStephen WeathersbyXijie J WangEric VautheyAntonietta GuagliardiMaksym V KovalenkoVanessa WoodAaron M LindenbergPublished in: Nature physics (2023)
Understanding the origin of electron-phonon coupling in lead halide perovskites is key to interpreting and leveraging their optical and electronic properties. Here we show that photoexcitation drives a reduction of the lead-halide-lead bond angles, a result of deformation potential coupling to low-energy optical phonons. We accomplish this by performing femtosecond-resolved, optical-pump-electron-diffraction-probe measurements to quantify the lattice reorganization occurring as a result of photoexcitation in nanocrystals of FAPbBr 3 . Our results indicate a stronger coupling in FAPbBr 3 than CsPbBr 3 . We attribute the enhanced coupling in FAPbBr 3 to its disordered crystal structure, which persists down to cryogenic temperatures. We find the reorganizations induced by each exciton in a multi-excitonic state constructively interfere, giving rise to a coupling strength that scales quadratically with the exciton number. This superlinear scaling induces phonon-mediated attractive interactions between excitations in lead halide perovskites.