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Tailoring a Two-Dimensional Halide Perovskite Composed of the Secondary Amine Cation for Anisotropic X-ray Responses.

Hao RongYu MaYi LiuQingshun FanWenjing LiXianmei ZhaoLinjie WeiJunhua LuoZhihua Sun
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Two-dimensional (2D) metal-halide perovskites have shown broad application prospects in the field of optoelectronic detection. The presence of the natural quantum-well structure results in strong anisotropy of physical properties, while studies on anisotropic X-ray responses remain insufficient. Here, we present an intriguing anisotropy of X-ray-responsive behaviors in a 2D halide perovskite, ( t -ACH) 2 (DMA)Pb 2 Br 7 ( 1 , where t -ACH is trans -4-(aminomethyl)cyclohexanecarboxylate and DMA is dimethylamine), in which the secondary amine DMA + cation with a large ionic radius locates inside the perovskite cage to form inorganic frameworks. The alternative alignment of inorganic slabs and organic bilayers creates a typical quantum-well architecture, which accounts for the generation of photoelectronic anisotropy. High-quality crystals of 1 exhibit notable semiconducting properties with a large μτ product (1.9 × 10 -4 cm 2 V -1 ). Intriguingly, 1 has better X-ray detection sensitivity (∼569.9 μC Gy air -1 cm -2 ) along the in-plane direction, which is attributed to its excellent charge carrier transport performance in this direction. Conversely, the higher resistance stemming from the organic barrier results in a lower detection limit along the out-of-plane direction (∼78.1 nGy air s -1 ), much lower than the medical diagnostic criteria (∼5.5 μGy air s -1 ). This work might open up new possibilities for the creative use of hybrid perovskites in direct X-ray detection.
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