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[Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases

[Image: see text] Two-dimensional (2D) lead halide perovskites are a family of materials at the heart of solar cell, light-emitting diode, and photodetector technologies. This perspective leads to a number of synthetic efforts toward materials of this class, including those with prescribed polar arc...

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Autores principales: Fedoruk, Katarzyna, Drozdowski, Dawid, Maczka, Mirosław, Zareba, Jan K., Stefańska, Dagmara, Gagor, Anna, Sieradzki, Adam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9533301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36130277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02206
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author Fedoruk, Katarzyna
Drozdowski, Dawid
Maczka, Mirosław
Zareba, Jan K.
Stefańska, Dagmara
Gagor, Anna
Sieradzki, Adam
author_facet Fedoruk, Katarzyna
Drozdowski, Dawid
Maczka, Mirosław
Zareba, Jan K.
Stefańska, Dagmara
Gagor, Anna
Sieradzki, Adam
author_sort Fedoruk, Katarzyna
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Two-dimensional (2D) lead halide perovskites are a family of materials at the heart of solar cell, light-emitting diode, and photodetector technologies. This perspective leads to a number of synthetic efforts toward materials of this class, including those with prescribed polar architectures. The methylhydrazinium (MHy(+)) cation was recently presumed to have an unusual capacity to generate non-centrosymmetric perovskite phases, despite its intrinsically nonchiral structure. Here, we witness this effect once again in the case of the Ruddlesden–Popper perovskite phase of formula MHy(2)PbCl(4). MHy(2)PbCl(4) features three temperature-dependent crystal phases, with two first-order phase transitions at T(1) = 338.2 K (331.8 K) and T(2) = 224.0 K (205.2 K) observed in the heating (cooling) modes, respectively. Observed transitions involve a transformation from high-temperature orthorhombic phase I, with the centrosymmetric space group Pmmn, through the room-temperature modulated phase II, with the average structure being isostructural to I, to the low-temperature monoclinic phase III, with non-centrosymmetric space group P2(1). The intermediate phase II is a rare example of a modulated structure in 2D perovskites, with Pmmn(00γ)s00 superspace symmetry and modulation vector q ≅ 0.25c*. MHy(2)PbCl(4) beats the previous record of MHy(2)PbBr(4) in terms of the shortest inorganic interlayer distance in 2D perovskites (8.79 Å at 350 K vs 8.66 Å at 295 K, respectively). The characteristics of phase transitions are explored with differential scanning calorimetry, dielectric, and Raman spectroscopies. The non-centrosymmetry of phase III is confirmed with second harmonic generation (SHG) measurements, and polarity is demonstrated by the pyroelectric effect. MHy(2)PbCl(4) also exhibits thermochromism, with the photoluminescence (PL) color changing from purplish-blue at 80 K to bluish-green at 230 K. The demonstration of polar characteristics for one more member of the methylhydrazinium perovskites settles a debate about whether this approach can present value for the crystal engineering of acentric solids similar to that which was recently adopted by a so-called fluorine substitution effect.
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spelling pubmed-95333012022-10-06 [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases Fedoruk, Katarzyna Drozdowski, Dawid Maczka, Mirosław Zareba, Jan K. Stefańska, Dagmara Gagor, Anna Sieradzki, Adam Inorg Chem [Image: see text] Two-dimensional (2D) lead halide perovskites are a family of materials at the heart of solar cell, light-emitting diode, and photodetector technologies. This perspective leads to a number of synthetic efforts toward materials of this class, including those with prescribed polar architectures. The methylhydrazinium (MHy(+)) cation was recently presumed to have an unusual capacity to generate non-centrosymmetric perovskite phases, despite its intrinsically nonchiral structure. Here, we witness this effect once again in the case of the Ruddlesden–Popper perovskite phase of formula MHy(2)PbCl(4). MHy(2)PbCl(4) features three temperature-dependent crystal phases, with two first-order phase transitions at T(1) = 338.2 K (331.8 K) and T(2) = 224.0 K (205.2 K) observed in the heating (cooling) modes, respectively. Observed transitions involve a transformation from high-temperature orthorhombic phase I, with the centrosymmetric space group Pmmn, through the room-temperature modulated phase II, with the average structure being isostructural to I, to the low-temperature monoclinic phase III, with non-centrosymmetric space group P2(1). The intermediate phase II is a rare example of a modulated structure in 2D perovskites, with Pmmn(00γ)s00 superspace symmetry and modulation vector q ≅ 0.25c*. MHy(2)PbCl(4) beats the previous record of MHy(2)PbBr(4) in terms of the shortest inorganic interlayer distance in 2D perovskites (8.79 Å at 350 K vs 8.66 Å at 295 K, respectively). The characteristics of phase transitions are explored with differential scanning calorimetry, dielectric, and Raman spectroscopies. The non-centrosymmetry of phase III is confirmed with second harmonic generation (SHG) measurements, and polarity is demonstrated by the pyroelectric effect. MHy(2)PbCl(4) also exhibits thermochromism, with the photoluminescence (PL) color changing from purplish-blue at 80 K to bluish-green at 230 K. The demonstration of polar characteristics for one more member of the methylhydrazinium perovskites settles a debate about whether this approach can present value for the crystal engineering of acentric solids similar to that which was recently adopted by a so-called fluorine substitution effect. American Chemical Society 2022-09-21 2022-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9533301/ /pubmed/36130277 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02206 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Fedoruk, Katarzyna
Drozdowski, Dawid
Maczka, Mirosław
Zareba, Jan K.
Stefańska, Dagmara
Gagor, Anna
Sieradzki, Adam
[Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title_full [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title_fullStr [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title_full_unstemmed [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title_short [Methylhydrazinium](2)PbCl(4), a Two-Dimensional Perovskite with Polar and Modulated Phases
title_sort [methylhydrazinium](2)pbcl(4), a two-dimensional perovskite with polar and modulated phases
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9533301/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36130277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02206
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