4.6 Article

Characterization of the Ammonium Bending Vibrations in Two-Dimensional Hybrid Lead-Halide Perovskites from Raman Spectroscopy and First-Principles Calculations

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 125, Issue 1, Pages 223-236

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c09621

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wayne State University
  2. American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund [60003-DNI6, 61117-DNI10]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DEAC02-06CH11357]

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Two-dimensional hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (2D HOIPs) are important energy materials with electronic properties influenced by coupling between inorganic and organic layers. Raman spectroscopy measurements and first-principles calculations were used to study Raman-active modes in four 2D HOIPs, revealing how the inorganic lattice framework modulates the vibrational properties of the organic cations. The properties of Raman-active ammonium bending modes can effectively probe the local microscopic structure of the inorganic lattice framework in 2D HOIPs.
The facile synthesis and electronic properties of two-dimensional hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (2D HOIPs) make these self-assembled systems an important class of energy materials. The basic building blocks of these materials include inorganic lattice frameworks that often consist of lead-halide octahedra and organic molecules possessing ammonium functional groups. Understanding the coupling between the inorganic and organic layers is key to unraveling how the electronic properties of 2D HOIPs relate to their structures. In this work, we leverage Raman spectroscopy measurements and first-principles calculations to characterize the Raman-active modes in four 2D HOIPs: hexylammonium lead iodide [(HA)(2)PbI4, HA = C6H13NH3+], hexylammonium lead bromide [(HA)(2)PbBr4], butylammonium lead iodide [(BA)(2)PbI4, BA = C4H9NH3+], and benzylammonium lead iodide [(BNA)(2)PbI4, BNA = C6H5CH2NH3+]. We focus on the 1400-1600 cm(-1) range where the Raman intensity of the molecular constituents is the strongest and assign the major peaks observed in experiments as ammonium bending vibrations. We employ a combination of density functional perturbation theory based on the local density approximation and the frozen-phonon approach based on the vdw-DF-cx functional to find a quantitative agreement between experimental and calculated Raman spectra. Furthermore, by comparing the vibrational spectra of isolated molecular cations with those near lead-halide clusters, we show how the inorganic lattice framework modulates the vibrational properties of the organic cations. We conclude that the properties of the Raman-active ammonium bending modes could effectively probe the local microscopic structure of the inorganic lattice framework in 2D HOIPs.

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