Thermal Stability of Chalcogenide Perovskites.
Roman BystrickýSameer Kumar TiwariPeter HutárMilan SykoraPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Chalcogenide perovskites (CPs) have recently attracted interest as a class of materials with practical potential in optoelectronics and have been suggested as a more thermally stable alternative to intensely studied halide perovskites (HPs). Here we report a comparative study of the thermal stability of representative HPs, MAPbI 3 (MA = CH 3 NH 3 + , methylammonium) and CsPbI 3 , and a series of CPs with compositions BaZrS 3 , β-SrZrS 3 , BaHfS 3 , SrHfS 3 . Changes in the crystal structure, chemical composition, and optical properties upon heating in air up to 800 °C were studied using thermogravimetric analysis, temperature-dependent X-ray diffraction, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. While HPs undergo phase transitions and thermally decompose at temperatures below 300 °C, the CPs show no changes in crystal phase or composition when heated up to at least 450 °C. At 500 °C CPs oxidize on time scales of several hours, forming oxides and sulfates. The structural origins of the higher thermal and phase stability of the CPs are discussed.