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Exciton-harvesting enabled efficient charged particle detection in zero-dimensional halides

  • Qian Wang
  • , Chenger Wang
  • , Hongliang Shi
  • , Jie Chen
  • , Junye Yang
  • , Alena Beitlerova
  • , Romana Kucerkova
  • , Zhengyang Zhou
  • , Yunyun Li
  • , Martin Nikl
  • , Xilei Sun*
  • , Xiaoping OuYang*
  • , Yuntao Wu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • CAS - Shanghai Institute of Ceramics
  • CAS - Institute of High Energy Physics
  • General Research Institute for Non-ferrous Metals China
  • Spallation Neutron Source Science Center
  • Czech Academy of Sciences
  • Northwest Institute of Nuclear Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Materials for radiation detection are critically important and urgently demanded in diverse fields, starting from fundamental scientific research to medical diagnostics, homeland security, and environmental monitoring. Low-dimensional halides (LDHs) exhibiting efficient self-trapped exciton (STE) emission with high photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) have recently shown a great potential as scintillators. However, an overlooked issue of exciton-exciton interaction in LDHs under ionizing radiation hinders the broadening of its radiation detection applications. Here, we demonstrate an exceptional enhancement of exciton-harvesting efficiency in zero-dimensional (0D) Cs3Cu2I5:Tl halide single crystals by forming strongly localized Tl-bound excitons. Because of the suppression of non-radiative exciton-exciton interaction, an excellent α/β pulse-shape-discrimination (PSD) figure-of-merit (FoM) factor of 2.64, a superior rejection ratio of 10−9, and a high scintillation yield of 26 000 photons MeV−1 under 5.49 MeV α-ray are achieved in Cs3Cu2I5:Tl single crystals, outperforming the commercial ZnS:Ag/PVT composites for charged particle detection applications. Furthermore, a radiation detector prototype based on Cs3Cu2I5:Tl single crystal demonstrates the capability of identifying radioactive 220Rn gas for environmental radiation monitoring applications. We believe that the exciton-harvesting strategy proposed here can greatly boost the applications of LDHs materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article number190
JournalLight: Science and Applications
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

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