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Temperature Difference Triggering Controlled Growth of All-Inorganic Perovskite Nanowire Arrays in Air.

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All-inorganic perovskites have attracted increasing worldwide interest due to its significantly improved stability in atmospheric environment compared to organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites, which renders it infinitely applicable in many fields such… Click to show full abstract

All-inorganic perovskites have attracted increasing worldwide interest due to its significantly improved stability in atmospheric environment compared to organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites, which renders it infinitely applicable in many fields such as electronics, optoelectronics, and energy storage. However, all-inorganic perovskites have to confront the challenges from fabrication before their wide utilization in the aforementioned applications. Liquid-phase synthesis holds the advantage of mass production and easy modulation of composition but with the deficiencies of relatively low crystallinity and disordered products. Interestingly, gas-phase growth has complementary characteristics compared to the liquid-phase method. In this work, it is proposed that a novel temperature difference triggers growth strategy to integrate the merits of the liquid- and gas-phase methods, and the feasibility of this strategy via a simple lab-use hot plate is demonstrated. High quality all-inorganic perovskites, cesium lead halide (CsPbX3 ) nanowire arrays, can be epitaxially grown as in a gas-phase method, but at the same time, the composition of products can be easily modulated by predesigning the recipe of precursors as in the liquid-phase method on a large scale. Notably, the as-fabricated CsPbX3 perovskite nanowire arrays demonstrate excellent stability and good optoelectronic properties in air. It is believed that this novel strategy can strikingly prompt the development of perovskites fabrication and applications in future.

Keywords: perovskite nanowire; phase; temperature difference; nanowire arrays; growth

Journal Title: Small
Year Published: 2018

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