Negative Pressure Engineering with Large Cage Cations in 2D Halide Perovskites Causes Lattice Softening

Citation:

Li, X. ; Fu, Y. ; Pedesseau, L. ; Guo, P. ; Cuthriell, S. ; Hadar, I. ; Even, J. ; Katan, C. ; Stoumpos, C. C. ; Schaller, R. D. ; et al. Negative Pressure Engineering With Large Cage Cations In 2D Halide Perovskites Causes Lattice Softening. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 2020, 142, 11486-11496.

Date Published:

JUL 1

Abstract:

Organic–inorganic hybrid halide perovskites are promising semiconductors with tailorable optical and electronic properties. The choice of A-site cation to support a three-dimensional (3D) perovskite structure AMX3 (where M is a metal and X is a halide) is limited by the geometric Goldschmidt tolerance factor. However, this geometric constraint can be relaxed in two-dimensional (2D) perovskites, providing us an opportunity to understand how various A-site cations modulate the structural properties and thereby the optoelectronic properties. Here, we report the synthesis and structures of single-crystal (BA)2(A)Pb2I7 where BA = butylammonium and A = methylammonium (MA), formamidinium (FA), dimethylammonium (DMA), or guanidinium (GA), with a series of A-site cations varying in size. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction reveals that the MA, FA, and GA structures crystallize in the same Cmcm space group, while the DMA imposes the Ccmb space group. We observe that as the A-site cation becomes larger, the Pb–I bond continuously elongates, expanding the volume of the perovskite cage, equivalent to exerting “negative pressure” on the perovskite structures. Optical studies and DFT calculations show that the Pb–I bond length elongation reduces the overlap of the Pb s- and I p-orbitals and increases the optical bandgap, while Pb–I–Pb tilting angles play a secondary role. Raman spectra show lattice softening with increasing size of the A-site cation. These structural changes with enlarged A cations result in significant decreases in photoluminescence intensity and lifetime, consistent with a more pronounced nonradiative decay. Transient absorption microscopy results suggest that the PL drop may derive from a higher concentration of traps or phonon-assisted nonradiative recombination. The results highlight that extending the range of Goldschmidt tolerance factors for 2D perovskites is achievable, enabling further tuning of the structure–property relationships in 2D perovskites.


Abstract Image

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 12/01/2021