The bromide–chloride mixed quasi-two-dimensional
(2D) perovskite,
with a natural quantum well structure and tunable exciton binding
energy, has gained significant attention for high-performance blue
perovskite light-emitting diodes (PeLEDs). However, the relative importance
of having a low trap state density or efficient exciton transfer for
high-efficiency electroluminescence (EL) performance remains elusive.
Here, two molecules with the benzoic acid group, sodium 4-fluorobenzoate
(SFB) and 3,5-dibromobenzoic acid (DBA), are used to modulate the
phase distribution and trap state to explore the effect between energy
transfer and defect passivation. As a result, when the n = 1 phase is inhibited in both films, the DBA@SFB-modified perovskite
films achieve a higher photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) than
the SFB-modified perovskite films due to effective defect passivation.
However, DBA@SFB-modified PeLEDs exhibit lower external quantum efficiency
(EQE) compared to SFB-modified PeLEDs due to the poor exciton transfer
between the low-dimensional phase. This demonstrates that passivation
strategies may enhance photoluminescence through reducing nonradiative
recombination, but the effect of phase distribution is pivotal for
EL performance by efficient energy transfer in quasi-2D perovskites.
Femtosecond time-resolved transient absorption measurements confirm
the fastest carrier dynamics in SFB-modified perovskite films, further
corroborating the above result. This work provides useful information
about phase modulation and defect passivation for high-efficiency
blue quasi-2D PeLEDs