RESUMO
Phase segregation in inorganic CsPb(BrxI1-x)3 nanoparticles (NPs) exhibiting originally a homogeneous [Br]:[I] mixture was investigated by means of in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and evaluated by using multivariate analyses. The colloidal synthesis of the NPs offers good control of the halide ratios on the nanoscale. The spatially resolved TEM investigations were correlated with integral photoluminescence measurements. By this approach, the halide-segregation processes and their spatial distributions can be described as being governed by the interaction of three partial processes: electron- and photon-irradiation-induced iodide oxidation, local differences in band gap energy, and intrinsic lattice strain. Since the oxidation can be induced by both electron-beam and light irradiation, both irradiation types can induce phase segregation in CsPb(BrxI1-x)3 compounds. This makes in situ TEM a valuable tool to monitor phase transformation in corresponding NPs and thin films on the sub-nm scale.
RESUMO
Photoinduced phase separation, which limits the available band gap energies for photovoltaic applications, was reported for a range of mixed-halide perovskites. A microscopic understanding of the phase separation mechanism is still lacking but may be beneficial to rationalize limitations as well as enable the design of phase-stable perovskite semiconductors. In this letter, electron-beam-induced phase separations and transformations were investigated in a small crystallite of CsPb(Br0.8I0.2)3 by means of in situ high-resolution imaging in a transmission electron microscope. The acquired time series was evaluated using principal and independent component analysis to classify the structural change during the illumination by the electron beam. A more iodine-rich phase with the approximate composition of CsPb(Br0.6I0.4)3 was found to form at the edges of the particle, while a ternary pure bromide phase of CsPbBr3 remained at its center. These results provide an atomistic picture of in-grain phase segregation into iodide-rich phases at grain boundaries and bromide-rich phases in the interior of the grain.