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Prospective Chalcohalide Perovskites: Pursuing (and Failing) the Synthesis of CsBiSCl 2 Nanocrystals.

Authors :
Quarta D
Tobaldi DM
Giansante C
Source :
The journal of physical chemistry letters [J Phys Chem Lett] 2024 Aug 01; Vol. 15 (30), pp. 7645-7651. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 22.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Heavy pnictogen chalcohalides are often termed lead-free, perovskite-inspired materials. Despite theoretical predictions, incontrovertible experimental demonstrations of heavy pnictogen chalcohalides adopting a perovskite structure are lacking. Here we report our attempts to prepare CsBiSCl <subscript>2</subscript> adopting a perovskite structure as colloidal nanocrystals. Synthesis of nanoscale materials can indeed rely on fast, nonequilibrium reactions and on large, eventually thermodynamically favorable surface energies, leading to the possibility of stabilizing kinetically trapped or metastable phases. However, we obtained no CsBiSCl <subscript>2</subscript> , but a mixture of nanocrystals of secondary phases, namely Cs <subscript>3</subscript> BiCl <subscript>6</subscript> submicrometric polyhedra, Bi <subscript>2</subscript> S <subscript>3</subscript> nanoscopic rods, and Cs <subscript>3</subscript> Bi <subscript>2</subscript> Cl <subscript>9</subscript> nanoscopic dots, whose low polydispersity enabled an effective separation via size/shape selective precipitation. This work confirms that heavy pnictogen chalcohalides are hardly prone to adopting a perovskite structure. Nevertheless, chemistry at the nanoscale offers multiple possibilities for overcoming phase segregation and pursuing the synthesis of prospective mixed anion compound semiconductors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1948-7185
Volume :
15
Issue :
30
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of physical chemistry letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39036972
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c01656