Login / Signup

Exogenous Metal Cations in the Synthesis of CsPbBr 3 Nanocrystals and Their Interplay with Tertiary Amines.

Zhanzhao LiLuca GoldoniYe WuMuhammad ImranYurii P IvanovGiorgio DivitiniJuliette ZitoIyyappa Rajan PanneerselvamDmitry BaranovIvan InfanteLuca De TrizioLiberato Manna
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Current syntheses of CsPbBr 3 halide perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) rely on overstoichiometric amounts of Pb 2+ precursors, resulting in unreacted lead ions at the end of the process. In our synthesis scheme of CsPbBr 3 NCs, we replaced excess Pb 2+ with different exogenous metal cations (M) and investigated their effect on the synthesis products. These cations can be divided into two groups: group 1 delivers monodisperse CsPbBr 3 cubes capped with oleate species (as for the case when Pb 2+ is used in excess) and with a photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) as high as 90% with some cations (for example with M = In 3+ ); group 2 yields irregularly shaped CsPbBr 3 NCs with broad size distributions. In both cases, the addition of a tertiary ammonium cation (didodecylmethylammonium, DDMA + ) during the synthesis, after the nucleation of the NCs, reshapes the NCs to monodisperse truncated cubes. Such NCs feature a mixed oleate/DDMA + surface termination with PLQY values of up to 97%. For group 1 cations this happens only if the ammonium cation is directly added as a salt (DDMA-Br), while for group 2 cations this happens even if the corresponding tertiary amine (DDMA) is added, instead of DDMA-Br. This is attributed to the fact that only group 2 cations can facilitate the protonation of DDMA by the excess oleic acid present in the reaction environment. In all cases studied, the incorporation of M cations is marginal, and the reshaping of the NCs is only transient: if the reactions are run for a long time, the truncated cubes evolve to cubes.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • room temperature
  • heavy metals
  • quantum dots
  • molecular dynamics
  • risk assessment
  • deep learning
  • energy transfer
  • aqueous solution
  • mass spectrometry
  • brain injury
  • neural network