Expanding the horizons of the thermodynamic landscape and optoelectronic properties of soft 2D hybrid perovskites MHy2PbX4†
Abstract
Compared to their three-dimensional analogues, the layered perovskites A2BX4 (A = organic cation; X = Br, I, Cl) display higher anisotropy, elasticity and sensitivity to external stimuli. In this study, we employ a combination of diffraction, calorimetric, dielectric, vibrational and optical measurements to uncover the rich phase diversity and atypical pressure-induced transformations of a layered perovskite analogue, methylhydrazinium tetraiodoplumbate (CH3NH2NH2Pbl4, MHy2PbI4). At ambient pressure, MHy2PbI4 exists in four paraelectric phases I–IV, depending on temperature. The combined structural and spectroscopic measurements revealed that phase II (space group Pmcn) is exceptionally responsive to pressure stimuli and transforms to phase V (Pmmn) at 70 MPa; further transitions of MHy2PbI4 at 1.15 and 3.00 GPa led to the polar phases VI (Pmn21) and VII (P21). Phase VI strikingly reassembles the ambient-pressure ferroelectric phase of MHy2PbBr4. The transition from phase V to VI reduces the cation disorder and deforms the PbI6 octahedra which leads to a two-fold increase of the free exciton (FX) and the suppression of bound-exciton (BX1 and BX2) luminescence band intensities as well as to red shifts of absorption (dE/dp = −58(2) meV GPa−1) and emission signals (dE/dp = −63(2) meV GPa−1). Above 3.0 GPa, a new phase VII displays negative area compressibility with βa = −22.4(8) and βb = −6.2(6) TPa−1 along the polyanionic sheets. The structure of phase VII revealed the underlying mechanism involving pressure-triggered penetration of MHy+ cations into the voids between the highly deformed octahedra. Overall, the construction of the p–T phase diagram for MHy2PbI4 demonstrates the high structural elasticity of this hybrid perovskite, its pressure-induced polar phases isostructural with ferroelectric analog MHy2PbBr4 and unique mechanical responses to external stimuli.