AI Article Synopsis

  • Metal halide perovskite nanocrystals are being developed using colloidal chemistry for advanced applications, with new morphologies and doping methods introduced through post-synthesis reactions.
  • Recent studies have utilized laser irradiation in liquids to rapidly synthesize and transform these nanocrystals, primarily focusing on smaller (~15 nm) crystals and observing processes like fragmentation and anion exchange.
  • This research employs a 513 nm femtosecond laser to induce transformations in larger nanocrystals (~100 nm), resulting in various morphologies such as nanohexagons, nanocubes, nanoplatelets, and nanosheets through processes that include side-by-side attachment and complete anion exchange.

Article Abstract

Metal halide perovskite nanocrystals, an emerging class of materials for advanced photonic and optoelectronic applications, are mainly fabricated with colloidal chemistry routes. On the quest for new properties according to application needs, new perovskite systems of various morphologies and levels of doping and alloying have been developed, often also involving post-synthesis reactions. Recently, laser irradiation in liquids has been utilized as a fast method to synthesize or transform materials and interesting laser-induced transformations on nanocrystals were induced. These studies in general have been limited to small nanocrystals (~15 nm). In the case of halide perovskites, fragmentation or anion exchange have been observed in such laser-based processes, but no crystal structure transformations were actually observed or deliberately studied. Nanocrystals are more sensitive to light exposure compared to the corresponding bulk crystals. Additional factors, such as size, morphology, the presence of impurities, and others, can intricately affect the photon absorption and heat dissipation in nanocrystal suspensions during laser irradiation. All these factors can play an important role in the final morphologies and in the time required for these transformations to unfold. In the present work, we have employed a 513 nm femtosecond (fs) laser to induce different transformations in large nanocrystals, in which two phases coexist in the same particle (CsPbBr/CsPbBr nanohexagons of ~100 nm), dispersed in dichlorobenzene. These transformations include: (i) the exfoliation of the primary nanohexagons and partial anion exchange; (ii) fragmentation in smaller nanocubes and partial anion exchange; (iii) side-by-side-oriented attachment, fusion, and formation of nanoplatelets and complete anion exchange; (iv) side-by-side attachment, fusion, and formation of nanosheets. Partial or complete Br-Cl anion exchange in the above transformations was triggered by the partial degradation of dichlorobenzene. In addition to the detailed analysis of the various nanocrystal morphologies observed in the various transformations, the structure-photoluminescence relationships for the different samples were analyzed and discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8879588PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12040703DOI Listing

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