Melting Transitions of the Organic Subphase in Layered Two-Dimensional Halide Perovskites

J Phys Chem Lett. 2019 Jun 6;10(11):2924-2930. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b00983. Epub 2019 May 22.

Abstract

We investigate the phase behavior of two-dimensional (C xH2 x+1NH3)2[(MA,FA)PbI3] n-1PbI4 layered perovskites near room temperature (-20 °C to +100 °C) as a function of the octahedral layer thickness ( n = 1, 2, 3, 4), alkylammonium chain length (butyl, pentyl, and hexyl), and identity of the small organic cation (methylammonium and formamidinium). Using differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffraction, we observe a reversible first-order phase transition corresponding to a partial melting transition of the alkylammonium chains separating the perovskite layers. The melting temperature, Tm, increases from 10 to 77.9 to 95.9 °C as the carbon chain length increases from C4 to C5 to C6, but it is insensitive to octahedral layer thickness, n. The latent heat of melting, Δ Hm, was in the range of 3-5 kJ/mol-spacer, indicating only partial disordering of the carbon chain. We discuss these findings and their implications in the context of melting in other two-dimensional molecular systems.