Isothermal pressure-derived metastable states in 2D hybrid perovskites showing enduring bandgap narrowing

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Abstract

Materials in metastable states, such as amorphous ice and supercooled condensed matter, often exhibit exotic phenomena. To date, achieving metastability is usually accomplished by rapid quenching through a thermodynamic path function, namely, heating−cooling cycles. However, heat can be detrimental to organic-containing materials because it can induce degradation. Alternatively, the application of pressure can be used to achieve metastable states that are inaccessible via heating−cooling cycles. Here we report metastable states of 2D organic−inorganic hybrid perovskites reached through structural amorphization under compression followed by recrystallization via decompression. Remarkably, such pressure-derived metastable states in 2D hybrid perovskites exhibit enduring bandgap narrowing by as much as 8.2% with stability under ambient conditions. The achieved metastable states in 2D hybrid perovskites via compression−decompression cycles offer an alternative pathway toward manipulating the properties of these “soft” materials.

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Liu, G., Gong, J., Kong, L., Schaller, R. D., Hu, Q., Liu, Z., … Xu, T. (2018). Isothermal pressure-derived metastable states in 2D hybrid perovskites showing enduring bandgap narrowing. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(32), 8076–8081. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1809167115

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