Continuous synthesis of all-inorganic low-dimensional bismuth-based metal halides Cs4MnBi2Cl12 from reversible precursors Cs3BiCl6 and Cs3Bi2Cl9 under phase engineering†
Abstract
Lead-free bismuth metal halide perovskites and their analogues have attracted much research interest for their excellent photoelectric properties. However, the synthesis of low-dimensional bismuth-based metal halide perovskites from bismuth-based perovskite-based precursors has rarely been reported. In this work, we report the synthesis of Cs3BiCl6 and Cs3Bi2Cl9 using an improved room temperature, supersaturated recrystallization method, whereby the two precursors can be interconverted by addition of raw material post-synthetically, and both can be used as precursors together with suitable Mn2+ and other cations (Cs+, Bi3+), to synthesize fully inorganic, layered double perovskites, such as Cs4MnBi2Cl12, which exhibit the bright orange-yellow light that is characteristic of Mn2+. We further demonstrate that partial replacement of Mn2+ by Cd2+ in Cs4MnBi2Cl12 can weaken the strong coupling effect between Mn2+ and Mn2+, which inhibits the energy transfer to defects where non-radiative decay is likely to occur, and so achieves an effective energy transfer and thus improves the photoluminescence efficiency (PLQY). In the partially Cd2+-substituted, layered double perovskites, Cs4Mn1−xCdxBi2Cl12, when x = 0.7 the PLQY reaches a maximum value of 57.2%. Our study provides a new approach for the design and synthesis of low-dimensional bismuth-based metal halides with flexibility in adjusting their optical properties.