posted on 2023-02-02, 13:03authored byHaining Zheng, Rongrong Zhang, Xiao Wu, Qihan Zhang, Zhenyue Wu, Walter P. D. Wong, Jingsheng Chen, Qing-Hua Xu, Kian Ping Loh
Hybrid organic–inorganic perovskites
(HOIPs) are
promising
stimuli-responsive materials (SPMs) owing to their molecular softness
and tailorable structural dimensionality. The design of mechanically
responsive HOIPs requires an in-depth understanding of how lattice
strain induces intermolecular rearrangement that impacts physical
properties. While chirality transfer from an organic cation to an
inorganic lattice is known to influence chiral-optical properties,
its effect on strain-induced phase conversion has not been explored.
As opposed to achiral or racemic organic cations, chiral organic cations
can potentially afford a new dimension in strain-responsive structural
change. Herein, we demonstrate that mechanical strain induces a solid
phase crystal conversion in chiral halide pseudo-perovskite
single crystals (R/S)-(FE)2CuCl4 (FE = (4-Fluorophenyl)ethylamine) from a 0D isolated
CuCl4 tetrahedral to 1D corner-sharing CuFCl5 octahedral framework via the incorporation of Cu···F
interaction and N–H···F hydrogen bonding. This
strain-induced crystal-to-crystal conversion involves the connection
of neighboring 0D CuCl4 tetrahedra via Cu2+–Cl––Cu2+ linkages as well as the incorporation
of a F-terminated organic cation as one of the X atoms in BX6 octahedra, leading to a reduced band gap and paramagnetic-to-ferromagnetic
conversion. Control experiments using nonchiral or racemic perovskite
analogs show the absence of such solid phase conversion. To demonstrate
pressure-sensitive properties, the 0D phase is dispersed in water-soluble
poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) polymer, which can be applied to a large-scale
pressure-induced array display on fibrous Spandex substrates via a
screen-printing method.