Sub-50 Picosecond exceptionally Bright Perovskite Scintillation by Unlocking Giant Oscillator Strength
Chuanwei Dai, Yunbiao Zhao, Xiao Ouyang, Huaqing Huang, Yulan Liang + 9 more
TLDR
New perovskite scintillators achieve sub-50 picosecond emission and high light yield by unlocking giant oscillator strength, enabling ultrafast radiation detection.
Key contributions
- Demonstrates a strategy using coherent radiative acceleration in CsPbCl3 perovskite nanocrystals for ultrafast photon bursts.
- Unlocks giant oscillator strength by suppressing exciton-phonon scattering, achieving a 13.11 ps dominant lifetime.
- Achieves a high light yield of 21,851 ph/MeV, with >100x faster photon emission than state-of-the-art.
- Validates 30.8 ps coincidence time resolution, resolving 13.5 ps electron bunches and 16.6 ps gamma-ray pulses.
Why it matters
This paper breaks the long-standing sub-nanosecond limit in scintillator speed, crucial for precise timing in high-energy physics and medical diagnostics. By pushing the picosecond frontier, it enables next-generation extreme radiation detection.
Original Abstract
Ultrafast scintillators are indispensable for precise timing in high-energy physics and medical diagnostics. Fundamentally constrained by the trade-off between emission rate and light yield, conventional scintillators remain kinetically trapped in the sub-nanosecond regime, failing to break 50-picosecond limit. Here, we demonstrate a strategy to bypass this limitation by harnessing the coherent radiative acceleration in weakly confined CsPbCl3 perovskite nanocrystals to generate an ultrafast photon burst. This effect originates from the giant oscillator strength, which we unlock by suppressing exciton-phonon scattering at mild cryogenic temperatures. Consequently, our scintillator achieves an unprecedented dominant lifetime of 13.11 ps alongside a high light yield of 21,851 ph/MeV. The resulting prompt photon emission rate more than 100 times higher than that of state-of-the-art ultrafast scintillators. We validate this breakthrough in realistic detection scenarios, achieving a coincidence time resolution of 30.8 ps and accurately resolving 13.5 ps electron bunches and 16.6 ps single-shot gamma-ray pulses. Our findings establish a robust coherent framework for next-generation ultrafast scintillators, pushing extreme radiation diagnostics into the picosecond frontier.
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