posted on 2020-12-04, 13:34authored byMuhammad Imran, Julien Ramade, Francesco Di Stasio, Manuela De Franco, Joka Buha, Sandra Van Aert, Luca Goldoni, Simone Lauciello, Mirko Prato, Ivan Infante, Sara Bals, Liberato Manna
Various
strategies have been proposed to engineer the band gap
of metal halide perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) while preserving their
structure and composition and thus ensuring spectral stability of
the emission color. An aspect that has only been marginally investigated
is how the type of surface passivation influences the structural/color
stability of AMX3 perovskite NCs composed of two different
M2+ cations. Here, we report the synthesis of blue-emitting
Cs-oleate capped CsCdxPb1–xBr3 NCs, which exhibit a cubic perovskite
phase containing Cd-rich domains of Ruddlesden–Popper phases
(RP phases). The RP domains spontaneously transform into pure orthorhombic
perovskite ones upon NC aging, and the emission color of the NCs shifts
from blue to green over days. On the other hand, postsynthesis ligand
exchange with various Cs-carboxylate or ammonium bromide salts, right
after NC synthesis, provides monocrystalline NCs with cubic phase,
highlighting the metastability of RP domains. When NCs are treated
with Cs-carboxylates (including Cs-oleate), most of the Cd2+ ions are expelled from NCs upon aging, and the NCs phase evolves
from cubic to orthorhombic and their emission color changes from blue
to green. Instead, when NCs are coated with ammonium bromides, the
loss of Cd2+ ions is suppressed and the NCs tend to retain
their blue emission (both in colloidal dispersions and in electroluminescent
devices), as well as their cubic phase, over time. The improved compositional
and structural stability in the latter cases is ascribed to the saturation
of surface vacancies, which may act as channels for the expulsion
of Cd2+ ions from NCs.