Manganese-based hybrid metal halides are attractive for scintillator applications due to their high emission efficiency and good stability. However, most high-performance manganese scintillators rely on bulky and complex organic cations as A-site components, which reduce the lattice density and compromise X-ray absorption. To address this issue, we employed a small piperidinium cation (C5H12N+) to synthesize a zero-dimensional manganese halide, (C5H12N)2MnBr4, via solvent evaporation. This material shows green Mn2+ emission but suffers from concentration quenching, giving a low PLQY of 23.86%. Through Cd2+ alloying, the optimized (C5H12N)2MnBr4: 20%Cd achieves a markedly enhanced PLQY of 78.54%. As a scintillator, it exhibits excellent X-ray absorption─among the highest reported for hybrid manganese scintillators─and a high light yield of 21086 photons/MeV. This improvement results from the synergy between the small A-site cation (providing a compact lattice for strong absorption) and Cd2+ alloying (suppressing concentration quenching). A 10 × 10 cm flexible film fabricated by incorporating the alloyed powder into a TPU matrix shows outstanding radiation stability and a high X-ray imaging resolution of 14 lp mm-1. The combination of strong X-ray absorption, enhanced luminescence, and solution processability opens new opportunities for low-cost, large-area, flexible X-ray detectors and imaging.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Zixian Ye
Beijing University of Technology
Pengyu Zhang
Hu Guan
Beijing University of Technology
Inorganic Chemistry
Materials Science & Engineering
Beijing University of Technology
Hubei University of Arts and Science
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ye et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ec5b6088ba6daa22dacebf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.6c01459