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Structural Dynamics and Tunability for Colloidal Tin Halide Perovskite Nanostructures.

Kushagra GahlotSytze de GraafHerman DuimGeorgian NedelcuRazieh M KoushkiMajid AhmadiDnyaneshwar GavhaneAlessia LasorsaOreste De LucaPetra RudolfPatrick C A van der WelMaria Antonietta LoiBart J KooiGiuseppe PortaleJoaquin CalboLoredana Protesescu
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Lead halide perovskite nanocrystals are highly attractive for next-generation optoelectronics because they are easy to synthesize and offer great compositional and morphological tunability. However, the replacement of lead by tin for sustainability reasons is hampered by the unstable nature of Sn 2+ oxidation state and by an insufficient understanding of the chemical processes involved in the synthesis. Here, an optimized synthetic route is demonstrated to obtain stable, tunable, and monodisperse CsSnI 3 nanocrystals, exhibiting well-defined excitonic peaks. Similar to lead halide perovskites, these nanocrystals are prepared by combining a precursor mixture of SnI 2 , oleylamine, and oleic acid, with a Cs-oleate precursor. Among the products, nanocrystals with 10 nm lateral size in the γ-orthorhombic phase prove to be the most stable. To achieve such stability, an excess of precursor SnI 2 as well as substoichiometric Sn:ligand ratios are key. Structural, compositional, and optical investigations complemented by first-principle density functional theory calculations confirm that nanocrystal nucleation and growth follow the formation of (R-NH 3 + ) 2 SnI 4 nanosheets, with R = C 18 H 35 . Under specific synthetic conditions, stable mixtures of 3D nanocrystals CsSnI 3 and 2D nanosheets (Ruddlesden-Popper (R-NH 3 + ) 2 Cs n -1 Sn n I 3 n +1 with n > 1) are obtained. These results set a path to exploiting the high potential of Sn halide perovskite nanocrystals for opto-electronic applications.
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