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Hydrothermal and Mechanosynthesis of Mixed‐Cation Double Perovskite Scintillators for Radiation Detection

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Abstract This article details work performed on the synthesis and characterization of an inorganic mixed‐cation double halide perovskite, Cs 2 Ag .6 Na .4 In .85 Bi .15 Cl 6 (CANIBIC). Single crystals have been created via a hydrothermal reaction, milled into a powder, and pressed into pellets, while nanocrystals have been directly synthesized via mechanosynthesis. A computational model is constructed to predict the X‐ray diffraction pattern of CANIBIC; this model aligns very well with the X‐ray diffraction pattern measured for CANIBIC crystal powder. This model can therefore be developed in the future as a tool to predict lattice parameters and crystal structures of other novel double‐halide perovskites. Photoluminescence spectra obtained from each format show broad emission centered at 630 nm, as is typical for self‐trapped exciton emission; self‐trapped exciton emission is also confirmed by investigating photoluminescence intensity as a function of laser power. Nanocomposites are produced via the loading of nanocrystals of CANIBIC into PMMA. Although nanocomposite disks consisting of a small proportion of CANIBIC nanocrystals in PMMA have a smaller mass attenuation coefficient than a pressed pellet of CANIBIC, these disks have comparatively bright radioluminescence due to their optical transparency. These nanocomposite disks are therefore a particularly useful format for the practical use of the CANIBIC scintillator.

Description

Publication status: Published


Funder: STFC; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000271


Funder: Rutherford Appleton Laboratory; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100014570

Journal Title

Advanced Optical Materials

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2195-1071
2195-1071

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/S023046/1)
Defense Threat Reduction Agency (HDTRA1‐18‐1‐0019)
UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council ([EP/S023046/1])