ABSTRACT
While halide perovskite thin films have enormous potential for photovoltaics and other optoelectronics, the use of environmentally hazardous solvents during their deposition and processing poses a barrier to their commercialization. In this work, we demonstrated the deposition of melt-processable precursors and subsequent transformation into halide perovskite thin films without using environmentally hazardous solvents. We melted the wide-bandgap layered perovskites [(C6H5CH(CH3)CH2NH3)2PbI4:ß-Me-PEA2PbI4] at â¼210 °C and blade coated them into films. The ß-Me-PEA2PbI4 films were subsequently transformed to perovskite-phase methylammonium or formamidinium lead iodide films using a cation-exchange process in an alcohol-based solvent. Lastly, we demonstrate the potential and limitations of a completely solvent-free approach that uses solid-state transformation of a ß-Me-PEA2PbI4 film. This work represents a substantial step toward eliminating environmentally hazardous solvents and enables inexpensive industrial-scale liquid-phase deposition processes that do not require expensive systems for handling and disposing of environmentally hazardous solvents.
ABSTRACT
Germanium nanocrystals (Ge NCs) have potential to be used in several optoelectronic applications such as photodetectors and light-emitting diodes. Here, we report a solid-state route to synthesizing Ge NCs through thermal disproportionation of a germania (GeOX) glass, which was synthesized by hydrolyzing a GeCl2·dioxane complex. The GeOX glass synthesized in this manner was found to have residual Cl content. The process of nanocrystal nucleation and growth was monitored using powder X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy. Compared to existing solid-state routes for synthesizing colloidal Ge NCs, this approach requires fewer steps and is amenable to scaling to large-scale reactions.