Mechanochemistry as a Green Route: Synthesis, Thermal Stability, and Postsynthetic Reversible Phase Transformation of Highly-Luminescent Cesium Copper Halides

J Phys Chem Lett. 2020 Sep 17;11(18):7723-7729. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c02384. Epub 2020 Sep 1.

Abstract

Cesium copper halides (CCHs) show promise for optoelectronic applications, and their syntheses usually involve high-temperatures and hazard solvents. Herein, the synthesis of highly luminescent and phase-pure Cs3Cu2X5 (X = Cl, Br, and I) and CsCu2I3 via a solvent-free mechanochemical approach through manual grinding is demonstrated. This cost-effective approach can produce CCHs on a scale of tens to hundreds of grams. Rietveld refinement analysis of the X-ray diffraction patterns of the as-synthesized CCHs reveals their structural details. Notably, the emission characteristics of green-emitting, chloride-based CCHs remain stable even at elevated temperatures-maintaining 80% of initial PL efficiency at 150 °C. Lastly, a postsynthetic reversible transformation between zero- and one-dimensional CCH materials is demonstrated, indicating the labile nature of their crystal structure. The proposed study suggests that mechanochemistry can be an alternative and promising synthetic tool for fabricating high-quality lead-free metal halides.