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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(6): 4001-4012, 2024 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38291812

RESUMEN

Recent computational studies have predicted many new ternary nitrides, revealing synthetic opportunities in this underexplored phase space. However, synthesizing new ternary nitrides is difficult, in part because intermediate and product phases often have high cohesive energies that inhibit diffusion. Here, we report the synthesis of two new phases, calcium zirconium nitride (CaZrN2) and calcium hafnium nitride (CaHfN2), by solid state metathesis reactions between Ca3N2 and MCl4 (M = Zr, Hf). Although the reaction nominally proceeds to the target phases in a 1:1 ratio of the precursors via Ca3N2 + MCl4 → CaMN2 + 2 CaCl2, reactions prepared this way result in Ca-poor materials (CaxM2-xN2, x < 1). A small excess of Ca3N2 (ca. 20 mol %) is needed to yield stoichiometric CaMN2, as confirmed by high-resolution synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. In situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction studies reveal that nominally stoichiometric reactions produce Zr3+ intermediates early in the reaction pathway, and the excess Ca3N2 is needed to reoxidize Zr3+ intermediates back to the Zr4+ oxidation state of CaZrN2. Analysis of computationally derived chemical potential diagrams rationalizes this synthetic approach and its contrast from the synthesis of MgZrN2. These findings additionally highlight the utility of in situ diffraction studies and computational thermochemistry to provide mechanistic guidance for synthesis.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 63(7): 3250-3257, 2024 Feb 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38150180

RESUMEN

The synthesis of complex oxides at low temperatures brings forward aspects of chemistry not typically considered. This study focuses on perovskite LaMnO3, which is of interest for its correlated electronic behavior tied to the oxidation state and thus the spin configuration of manganese. Traditional equilibrium synthesis of these materials typically requires synthesis reaction temperatures in excess of 1000 °C, followed by subsequent annealing steps at lower temperatures and different p(O2) conditions to manipulate the oxygen content postsynthesis (e.g., LaMnO3+x). Double-ion exchange (metathesis) reactions have recently been shown to react at much lower temperatures (500-800 °C), highlighting a fundamental knowledge gap for how solids react at lower temperatures. Here, we revisit the metathesis reaction, LiMnO2 + LaOX, where X is a halide or mixture of halides, using in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction. These experiments reveal low reaction onset temperatures (ca. 450-480 °C). The lowest reaction temperatures are achieved by a mixture of lanthanum oxyhalide precursors: 2 LiMnO2 + LaOCl + LaOBr. In all cases, the resulting products are the expected alkali halide salt and defective La1-ϵMn1-ϵO3, where ϵ = x/(3 + x). We observe a systematic variation in defect concentration, consistent with a rapid stoichiometric local equilibration of the precursors and the subsequent global thermodynamic equilibration with O2 (g), as revealed by computational thermodynamics. Together, these results reveal how the inclusion of additional elements (e.g., Li and a halide) leads to the local equilibrium, particularly at low reaction temperatures for solid-state chemistry.

3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(10): 1957-1975, 2023 Oct 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37901171

RESUMEN

Synthesis is a major challenge in the discovery of new inorganic materials. Currently, there is limited theoretical guidance for identifying optimal solid-state synthesis procedures. We introduce two selectivity metrics, primary and secondary competition, to assess the favorability of target/impurity phase formation in solid-state reactions. We used these metrics to analyze 3520 solid-state reactions in the literature, ranking existing approaches to popular target materials. Additionally, we implemented these metrics in a data-driven synthesis planning workflow and demonstrated its application in the synthesis of barium titanate (BaTiO3). Using an 18-element chemical reaction network with first-principles thermodynamic data from the Materials Project, we identified 82985 possible BaTiO3 synthesis reactions and selected 9 for experimental testing. Characterization of reaction pathways via synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction reveals that our selectivity metrics correlate with observed target/impurity formation. We discovered two efficient reactions using unconventional precursors (BaS/BaCl2 and Na2TiO3) that produce BaTiO3 faster and with fewer impurities than conventional methods, highlighting the importance of considering complex chemistries with additional elements during precursor selection. Our framework provides a foundation for predictive inorganic synthesis, facilitating the optimization of existing recipes and the discovery of new materials, including those not easily attainable with conventional precursors.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(36): 19759-19767, 2023 Sep 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37649142

RESUMEN

α-FAPbI3 (FA+ = CH(NH2)2+) with a cubic perovskite structure is promising for photophysical applications. However, α-FAPbI3 is metastable at room temperature, and it transforms to the δ-phase at a certain period of time at room temperature. Herein, we report a thiocyanate-stabilized pseudo-cubic perovskite FAPbI3 with ordered columnar defects (α'-phase). This compound has a √5ap × âˆš5ap × ap tetragonal unit cell (ap: cell parameter of primitive perovskite cell) with a band gap of 1.91 eV. It is stable at room temperature in a dry atmosphere. Furthermore, the presence of the α'-phase in a mixed sample with the δ-phase drastically reduces the δ-to-α transition temperature measured on heating, suggesting the reduction of the nucleation energy of the α-phase or thermodynamic stabilization of the α-phase through epitaxy. The defect-ordered pattern in the α'-phase forms a coincidence-site lattice at the twinned boundary of the single crystals, thus hinting at an epitaxy- or strain-based mechanism of α-phase formation and/or stabilization. In this study, we developed a new strategy to control defects in halide perovskites and provided new insight into the stabilization of α-FAPbI3 by pseudo-halide and grain boundary engineering.

5.
Acta Crystallogr A Found Adv ; 78(Pt 3): 242-248, 2022 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35502715

RESUMEN

A cloud-hosted web-based software application, nmfMapping, for carrying out a non-negative matrix factorization of a set of powder diffraction or atomic pair distribution function datasets is described. This application allows structure scientists to find trends rapidly in sets of related data such as from in situ and operando diffraction experiments. The application is easy to use and does not require any programming expertise. It is available at https://pdfitc.org/.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(3): 1313-1322, 2022 01 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35029372

RESUMEN

The emission of white light from a single material is atypical and is of interest for solid-state lighting applications. Broadband light emission has been observed in some layered perovskite derivatives, A2PbBr4 (A = R-NH3+), and correlates with static structural distortions corresponding to out-of-plane tilting of the lead bromide octahedra. While materials with different organic cations can yield distinct out-of-plane tilts, the underlying origin of the octahedral tilting remains poorly understood. Using high energy resolution (e.g., quasi-elastic) neutron scattering, this contribution details the rotational dynamics of the organic cations in A2PbBr4 materials where A = n-butylammonium (nBA), 1,8-diaminooctammonium (ODA), and 4-aminobutyric acid (GABA). The organic cation dynamics differentiate (nBA)2PbBr4 from (ODA)PbBr4 or (GABA)2PbBr4 in that the larger spatial extent of dynamics of nBA yields a larger effective cation radius. The larger effective volume of the nBA cation in (nBA)2PbBr4 yields a closer to ideal A-site geometry, preventing the out-of-plane tilt and broadband luminescence. In all three compounds, we observe hydrogen dynamics attributed to rotation of the ammonium headgroup and at a time scale faster than the white light photoluminescence studied by time-correlated single photon counting spectroscopy. This supports a previous assignment of the broadband emission as resulting from a single ensemble, such that the emissive excited state experiences many local structures faster than the emissive decay. The findings presented here highlight the role of the organic cation and its dynamics in hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites and white light emission.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(37): 15185-15194, 2021 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34491732

RESUMEN

In sharp contrast to molecular synthesis, materials synthesis is generally presumed to lack selectivity. The few known methods of designing selectivity in solid-state reactions have limited scope, such as topotactic reactions or strain stabilization. This contribution describes a general approach for searching large chemical spaces to identify selective reactions. This novel approach explains the ability of a nominally "innocent" Na2CO3 precursor to enable the metathesis synthesis of single-phase Y2Mn2O7: an outcome that was previously only accomplished at extreme pressures and which cannot be achieved with closely related precursors of Li2CO3 and K2CO3 under identical conditions. By calculating the required change in chemical potential across all possible reactant-product interfaces in an expanded chemical space including Y, Mn, O, alkali metals, and halogens, using thermodynamic parameters obtained from density functional theory calculations, we identify reactions that minimize the thermodynamic competition from intermediates. In this manner, only the Na-based intermediates minimize the distance in the hyperdimensional chemical potential space to Y2Mn2O7, thus providing selective access to a phase which was previously thought to be metastable. Experimental evidence validating this mechanism for pathway-dependent selectivity is provided by intermediates identified from in situ synchrotron-based crystallographic analysis. This approach of calculating chemical potential distances in hyperdimensional compositional spaces provides a general method for designing selective solid-state syntheses that will be useful for gaining access to metastable phases and for identifying reaction pathways that can reduce the synthesis temperature, and cost, of technological materials.

8.
ACS Mater Lett ; 3(12): 1677-1683, 2021 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38532807

RESUMEN

Ternary nitride materials hold promise for many optical, electronic, and refractory applications; yet, their preparation via solid-state synthesis remains challenging. Often, high pressures or reactive gases are used to manipulate the effective chemical potential of nitrogen, yet these strategies require specialized equipment. Here, we report on a simple two-step synthesis using ion-exchange reactions that yield rocksalt-derived MgZrN2 and Mg2NbN3, as well as layered MgMoN2. All three compounds show almost temperature-independent and weak paramagnetic responses to an applied magnetic field at cryogenic temperatures, indicating phase-pure products. The key to synthesizing these ternary materials is an initial low-temperature step (300-450 °C) to promote Mg-M-N nucleation. The intermediates then are annealed (800-900 °C) to grow crystalline domains of the ternary product. Calorimetry experiments reveal that initial reaction temperatures are determined by phase transitions of reaction precursors, whereas heating directly to high temperatures results in decomposition. These two-step reactions provide a rational guide to material discovery of other bulk ternary nitrides.

9.
Inorg Chem ; 59(23): 17379-17384, 2020 Dec 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33232604

RESUMEN

The layered perovskite (MA)2PbI2(SCN)2 (MA = CH3NH3+) is a member of an emerging series of compounds derived from hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites. Here, we successfully synthesized (MA)2PbI2-xBrx(SCN)2 (0 ≤ x < 1.6) by using a solid-state reaction. Despite smaller bromide substitution for iodine, 1% linear expansion along the a axis was observed at x ∼ 0.4 due to a change of the orientation of the SCN- anions. Diffuse reflectance spectra reveal that the optical band gap increases by the bromide substitution, which is supported by the DFT calculations. Curiously, bromine-rich compounds where x ≥ 0.8 are light sensitive, leading to partial decomposition after ∼24 h. This study demonstrates that the layered perovskite (MA)2PbI2(SCN)2 tolerates a wide range of bromide substitution toward tuning the band gap energy.

10.
Inorg Chem ; 59(18): 13639-13650, 2020 Sep 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32866379

RESUMEN

In the synthesis of complex oxides, solid-state metathesis provides low-temperature reactions where product selectivity can be achieved through simple changes in precursor composition. The influence of precursor structure, however, is less understood in solid-state synthesis. Here we present the ternary metathesis reaction (LiMnO2 + YOCl → YMnO3 + LiCl) to target two yttrium manganese oxide products, hexagonal and orthorhombic YMnO3, when starting from three different LiMnO2 precursors. Using temperature-dependent synchrotron X-ray and neutron diffraction, we identify the relevant intermediates and temperature regimes of reactions along the pathway to YMnO3. Manganese-containing intermediates undergo a charge disproportionation into a reduced Mn(II,III) tetragonal spinel and oxidized Mn(III,IV) cubic spinel, which lead to hexagonal and orthorhombic YMnO3, respectively. Density functional theory calculations confirm that the presence of Mn(IV) caused by a small concentration of cation vacancies (∼2.2%) in YMnO3 stabilizes the orthorhombic polymorph over the hexagonal. Reactions over the course of 2 weeks yield o-YMnO3 as the majority product at temperatures below 600 °C, which supports an equilibration of cation defects over time. Controlling the composition and structure of these defect-accommodating intermediates provides new strategies for selective synthesis of complex oxides at low temperatures.

11.
Inorg Chem ; 59(19): 14399-14406, 2020 Oct 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32931259

RESUMEN

Hybrid perovskites are a technologically relevant family of materials, with potential applications in photovoltaics, solid-state lighting, and radiation detection. Interactions between the inorganic octahedral framework and the organic sublattice have been implicated in the structure and optoelectronic properties, but characterization of these interactions has been challenging, because of competition between organic-inorganic coupling and intraoctahedral interactions. Owing to their decreased octahedral connectivity, vacancy-ordered double perovskites present an ideal case study to examine organic-inorganic coupling in hybrid perovskites and their derivatives. Here, we describe the low-temperature, hysteretic phase transition of formamidinium tin(IV) iodide from the high-symmetry cubic phase to a lower-symmetry monoclinic phase. We propose that the hysteresis stems from organic-inorganic coupling mediated by local and spontaneous strain from the orientations of the formamidinium cations, which result in a ferroelastic phase transition.

12.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 53(Pt 3): 662-670, 2020 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32684881

RESUMEN

Temperature is a ubiquitous environmental variable used to explore materials structure, properties and reactivity. This article reports a new paradigm for variable-temperature measurements that varies the temperature continuously across a sample such that temperature is measured as a function of sample position and not time. The gradient approach offers advantages over conventional variable-temperature studies, in which temperature is scanned during a series measurement, in that it improves the efficiency with which a series of temperatures can be probed and it allows the sample evolution at multiple temperatures to be measured in parallel to resolve kinetic and thermodynamic effects. Applied to treat samples at a continuum of tem-peratures prior to measurements at ambient temperature, the gradient approach enables parametric studies of recovered systems, eliminating temperature-dependent structural and chemical variations to simplify interpretation of the data. The implementation of spatially resolved variable-temperature measurements presented here is based on a gradient-heater design that uses a 3D-printed ceramic template to guide the variable pitch of the wire in a resistively heated wire-wound heater element. The configuration of the gradient heater was refined on the basis of thermal modelling. Applications of the gradient heater to quantify thermal-expansion behaviour, to map metastable polymorphs recovered to ambient temperature, and to monitor the time- and temperature-dependent phase evolution in a complex solid-state reaction are demonstrated.

13.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(64): 9186-9189, 2020 Aug 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32661540

RESUMEN

Functional small molecules afford opportunities to direct solid-state inorganic reactions at low temperatures. Here, we use catalytic amounts of organosilicon molecules to influence the metathesis reaction: FeCl2 + Na2S2 → 2NaCl + FeS2. Specifically, hexaphenyldisiloxane ((C6H5)6Si2O) is shown to increase pyrite yields in metathesis reactions performed at 150 °C. In situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SXRD) paired with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) reveals that diffusion-limited intermediates are circumvented in the presence of (C6H5)6Si2O. Control reactions suggest that the observed change in the reaction pathway is imparted by the Si-O functional group. 1H NMR supports catalytic behavior, as (C6H5)6Si2O is unchanged ex post facto. Taken together, we hypothesize that the polar Si-O functional group coordinates to iron chloride species when NaCl and Na2S4 form, forming an unidentified, transient intermediate. Further exploration of targeted small molecules in these metathesis reaction provides new strategies in controlling inorganic materials synthesis at low-temperatures.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(15): 7023-7035, 2020 04 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32212651

RESUMEN

Olivine Fe2GeS4 has been identified as a promising photovoltaic absorber material introduced as an alternate candidate to iron pyrite, FeS2. The compounds share similar benefits in terms of elemental abundance and relative nontoxicity, but Fe2GeS4 was predicted to have higher stability with respect to decomposition to alternate phases and, therefore, more optimal device performance. Our initial report of the nanoparticle (NP) synthesis for Fe2GeS4 was not well understood and required an inefficient 24 h growth to dissolve an iron sulfide impurity. Here, we report an amide-assisted Fe2GeS4 NP synthesis that directly forms the phase-pure product in minutes. This significant advance was achieved by the replacement of the poorly understood hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS) additive and TMS2S by the conjugate base, lithium bis(trimethylsilyl)amide (LiN(SiMe3)2), and elemental S, respectively. We hypothesized that fragments of both TMS2S and HMDS had carried out the roles that Brønsted bases play in amide-assisted NP syntheses and were necessary for Ge incorporation. Convolution of this role with the supply of S in TMS2S caused the iron sulfide impurities. Separating these effects in the use of LiN(SiMe3)2 and elemental S resulted in synthetic control over the ternary phase. Herein we explore the Fe-Ge-S reaction landscape and the role of the base. Its concentration was found to increase the reactivities of the Fe, Ge, and S precursors, and we discuss possible metal-amide intermediates. This affords tunability in two areas: favorability of NP nucleation versus growth and phase formation. The phase-purity of Fe2GeS4 depends on the molar ratios of the cations, base, and amine as well as the Fe:Ge:S molar ratios. The resultant Fe2GeS4 NPs exhibit an interesting star anise-like morphology with stacks of nanoplates that intersect along a 6-fold rotation axis. The optical properties of the Fe2GeS4 NPs are consistent with previously published measurements showing a measured band gap of 1.48 eV.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 58(22): 15166-15174, 2019 Nov 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31682435

RESUMEN

In solid-state chemistry, stable phases are often missed if their synthesis is impractical, such as when decomposition or a polymorphic transition occurs at relatively low temperature. In the preparation of complex oxides, reaction temperatures commonly exceed 1000 °C with little to no control of the reaction pathway. Thus, a prerequisite for exploring the synthesis of complex oxides is to identify reactions with intermediates that are kinetically competent at low temperatures, as provided by assisted metathesis reactions. Here, we study the assisted metathesis reaction Mn2O3 + 2.2YCl3·6H2O + 3Li2CO3 → 2YMnO3 + 5.8LiCl + 0.2LiYCl4 + 3CO2 using in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction. By changing the atmosphere, oxygen vs inert gas, the reaction product changes from the overoxidized perovskite YMnO3+δ to the hexagonal YMnO3 polymorph at the reaction temperature of 850 °C, respectively. Analysis of the reaction pathways reveals two parallel reaction pathways in forming YMnO3 phases: (1) the slow reaction of metal oxides in a LiCl flux (Y2O3 + Mn2O3 [Formula: see text] 2YMnO3) and (2) the fast reaction from ternary intermediates (YOCl + LiMnO2 → LiCl + YMnO3). Control reactions reveal that both proposed pathways in isolation result in product formation, but the direct preparation of ternary intermediates (YOCl + LiMnO2 → LiCl + YMnO3) occurs at lower temperatures (500 °C) and shorter times (<24 h) and forms nominally stoichiometric orthorhombic YMnO3. These ternary intermediates react at a faster rate than the slow stepwise oxygenation of yttrium chloride to Y2O3 (YCl3 → YOCl → Y3O4Cl → Y2O3), which is relatively inert. These results support a kinetically controlled reaction pathway to form YMnO3 phases in assisted metathesis reactions with phase selectivity achievable through changes to reaction atmosphere.

16.
Dalton Trans ; 48(43): 16340-16349, 2019 Nov 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31621723

RESUMEN

Controlling the connectivity and topology of solids is a versatile way to target desired physical properties. This is especially relevant in the realm of hybrid halide semiconductors, where the long-range connectivity of the inorganic substructural unit can lead to significant changes in optoelectronic properties such as photoluminescence, charge transport, and absorption. We present a new series of hybrid metal-halide semiconductors, (phenH2)BiI5·H2O, (2,2-bpyH2)BiI5, (BrbpyH)BiI4·H2O, (phenH2)2Pb3I10·2H2O, and (2,2-bpyH2)2Pb3I10 where (phenH2)2+ = 1,10-phenanthroline-1,10-diium, (2,2-bpyH2)2+ = 2,2'-bipyridine-1,1'-diium and (BrbpyH)+ = 6,6'-dibromo-2,2'-bipyridium. These compounds allow us to observe how the planarity of the cation, induced either through structural modification in the case of (phenH2)2+ or through non-covalent interactions in (BrbpyH)+, both relative to (2,2-bpyH2)2+, modifies the inorganic substructural unit. While the Pb2+ series of compounds show minimal changes in inorganic connectivity, we observe large differences in the Bi3+ series, ranging from 0-D dimers to corner- and edge-sharing 1-D chains of octahedra. We find that compounds containing (phenH2)2+ and (BrbpyH)+ pack more efficiently than those with (2,2-bpyH2)2+ due to their retention of planarity leading to greater inorganic connectivity. Electronic structure calculations and optical diffuse reflectance reveal that the band gaps of these compounds are influenced by the degree of inorganic connectivity and the inorganic substructural unit distances. These results show that the structure and planarity of organic cations can directly influence both the inorganic connectivity and the optical properties that could be tuned for certain optoelectronic applications.

17.
Dalton Trans ; 48(43): 16298-16303, 2019 Nov 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31621732

RESUMEN

Many functional materials have relatively low decomposition temperatures (T≤ 400 °C), which makes their synthesis challenging using conventional high-temperature solid-state chemistry. Therefore, non-conventional techniques such as metathesis, hydrothermal, and solution chemistry are often employed to access low-temperature phases; the discovery of new chemistries is needed to expand access to these phases. This contribution discusses the use of triphenylphosphine (PPh3) as a molten flux to synthesize superconducting iron selenide (Fe1+δSe) at low temperature (T = 325 °C). Powder X-ray diffraction and magnetism measurements confirm the successful formation of superconducting iron selenide while nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and in situ X-ray diffraction show that the formation of superconducting FeSe at low temperatures is enabled by an adduct between the triphenylphosphine and selenium. Exploration of the Fe-Se-PPh3 phase space indicates that the PPh3-Se adduct effectively reduces the chemical potential of the selenium at high concentrations of triphenylphosphine. This contribution demonstrates that the use of a poorly-solvating yet reactive flux has the potential to enable the synthesis of new low-temperature phases of solid materials.

19.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 1276, 2019 03 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30894519

RESUMEN

Two-dimensional perovskites have emerged as more intrinsically stable materials for solar cells. Chemical tuning of spacer organic cations has attracted great interest due to their additional functionalities. However, how the chemical nature of the organic cations affects the properties of two-dimensional perovskites and devices is rarely reported. Here we demonstrate that the selection of spacer cations (i.e., selective fluorination of phenethylammonium) affects the film properties of two-dimensional perovskites, leading to different device performance of two-dimensional perovskite solar cells (average n = 4). Structural analysis reveals that different packing arrangements and orientational disorder of the spacer cations result in orientational degeneracy and different formation energies, largely explaining the difference in film properties. This work provides key missing information on how spacer cations exert influence on desirable electronic properties and device performance of two-dimensional perovskites via the weak and cooperative interactions of these cations in the crystal lattice.

20.
Inorg Chem ; 58(9): 5818-5826, 2019 May 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30900890

RESUMEN

Hybrid metal halides yield highly desirable optoelectronic properties and offer significant opportunity due to their solution processability. This contribution reports a new series of hybrid semiconductors, (C7H7)MX4 (M = Bi3+, Sb3+; X = Cl-, Br-, I-), that are composed of edge-sharing MX6 chains separated in space by π-stacked tropylium (C7H7+) cations; the inorganic chains resemble the connectivity of BiI3. The Bi3+ compounds have blue-shifted optical absorptions relative to the Sb3+ compounds that span the visible and near-IR region. Consistent with observations, DFT calculations reveal that the conduction band is composed of the tropylium cation and valence band primarily the inorganic chain: a charge-transfer semiconductor. The band gaps for both Bi3+ and Sb3+ compounds decrease systematically as a function of increasing halide size. These compounds are a rare example of charge-transfer semiconductors that also exhibit efficient crystal packing of the organic cations, thus providing an opportunity to study how structural packing affects optoelectronic properties.

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