Conversion of Electrochemically Deposited Aragonite Crystallites to Perovskite through In Situ Ion Exchange

24 November 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The unique and broadly applicable optoelectronic properties of metal-halide perovskite materials are determined by structural dimensionality. Conversion of scaffold supported carbonate salts to perovskite with microstructure retention has previously been shown to act as a gateway to unique morphologies. In the present work, calcium carbonate microstructures are electrochemically deposited on a transparent conducting oxide substrate. Through a series of ion-exchange reactions the microstructures are decorated with a layer of surface localized perovskite nanocrystals, indicating that this ion exchange process occurs at the microstructure surface. Throughout the conversion process, electron microscopy confirms that the microstructures retain their overall morphology while cubic perovskite nanocrystals exhibiting characteristic photoluminescence and photoblinking are formed at the interface. This work confirms a synthetic pathway in which perovskites can be made in shapes previously inaccessible, which may lead to enhanced optoelectronic properties.

Keywords

Biomineralization
Electrochemical deposition
Perovskite
Ion exchange
Morphology preservation

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Video 1
Description
Video recording taken during fluorescence microscopy experiment scanning a small area of the sample shows that these regions of different emission intensity on individual microstructures exhibit fluorescence blinking.
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Supporting Information
Description
Optical microscopy, PXRD, elemental composition analysis, DRIFTS, Auger electron spectroscopy
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