Abstract
Two-dimensional lead halide perovskites offer numerous attractive features for optoelectronics owing to their soft, deformable lattices and high degree of chemical tunability. While alteration of the metal and halide ions gives rise to significant modification of the bandgap energy, the organic spacer cations offer in-roads to tuning phase behavior and more subtle functionalities in ways that remain to be understood. Here, we study six variations of 2D perovskites changing only the organic spacer cations and demonstrate that these components intrinsically impact material response in important ways such as altering crystallographic structure, temperature-induced phase transitions, and photoluminescence emission. Two-dimensional perovskites containing commonly utilized aliphatic linear spacers, such as butylammonium, undergo phase transitions near room temperature. These transitions and temperature changes induce spacer-dependent variations in the emission spectra. Conversely, 2D perovskites comprising cyclic aliphatic spacers, such as cyclobutylammonium, are found to lack first-order phase transitions. These cyclic molecules are more sterically hindered within the crystal lattice, leading to temperature-induced contraction or expansion along certain crystallographic planes but no other significant thermal effects; additionally, they undergo changes in their emission spectra that cannot be explained by simple thermal expansion. Given the similarities in the dielectric and chemical makeup of this set of six alkylammonium molecules, these results are unexpected and suggest a large structural and thermal phase space via spacer manipulation that could lead to improved 2D perovskite functionalization.
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