Room temperature fabrication of stable, strongly luminescent dion–jacobson tin bromide perovskite microcrystals achieved through use of primary alcohols

9Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Lead-free two-dimensional metal halide perovskites have recently emerged as promising light-emitting materials due to their improved stability and attractive optical properties. Herein, a facile room temperature wet milling method has been developed to make Dion–Jacobson (DJ) phase ODASnBr4 perovskite microcrystals, whose crystallization was accomplished via the aid of introduced primary alcohols: ethanol, butanol, pentanol, and hexanol. Due to the strong intermolecular hydrogen bonding, the use of ethanol promoted the formation of non-doped ODASnBr4 microcrystals, with an emission peaked at 599 nm and a high photoluminescence quantum yield (PL QY) of 81%. By introducing other primary alcohols with weaker intermolecular hydrogen bonding such as butanol, pentanol, and hexanol, [SnBr6 ]4− octahedral slabs of the DJ perovskite microcrystals experienced various degrees of expansion while forming O–H … Br hydrogen bonds. This resulted in the emission spectra of these alcohol-doped microcrystals to be adjusted in the range from 572 to 601 nm, while keeping the PL QY high, at around 89%. Our synthetic strategy provides a viable pathway towards strongly emitting lead-free DJ perovskite microcrystals with an improved stability.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Qi, J., Wang, S., Portniagin, A., Kershaw, S. V., & Rogach, A. L. (2021). Room temperature fabrication of stable, strongly luminescent dion–jacobson tin bromide perovskite microcrystals achieved through use of primary alcohols. Nanomaterials, 11(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11102738

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free