Ruling over the surface chemistry of metal halide perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) is crucial to access reliable luminophores. Here, we provide an atomic-level description of the surface of colloidal CsPbBr3 NCs, achieving an effective passivation strategy that leads to near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield. To this end, we used two different types of CsPbBr3 NCs, which had been synthesized with an outer shell of either oleylammonium bromide ion pairs or Cs-oleate complexes. We perturbed the dynamic equilibria at the NCs’ surface with ligands from a comprehensive library, including amines (and their conjugated acids) with different basicities, chain lengths, and steric encumbrances. We demonstrate that control of both ligand binding affinity and ligand-to-NC molar ratio is essential to attain thermodynamically stable coordination of the NC surface. We thus present a reliable protocol for managing the surface chemistry of colloidal CsPbBr3 NCs and for selectively addressing their ligand-induced morphological (and structural) transformations.
The interaction of lead bromide perovskite nanocrystals with charged ligands, such as salts, zwitterions, or acid−base pairs, has been extensively documented over the past few years. On the other hand, little is known about the reactivity of perovskite nanocrystals toward neutral ligands. To fill this gap, in this work we study the interaction of CsPbBr 3 nanocrystals passivated with didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDABr) toward a series of exogenous acid/base ligands using a combined computational and experimental approach. Our analysis indicates that DDABr-capped nanocrystals are inert toward most ligands, except for carboxylic, phosphonic, and sulfonic acids. In agreement with the calculations, our experimental results indicate that the higher the acidity of the ligands employed in the treatment, the more etching is observed. In detail, dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid (pK a = −1.8) is found to etch the nanocrystals, causing their complete degradation. On the other hand, oleic and oleylphosphonic acids (pK a 9.9 and 2, respectively) interact with surface-bound DDA molecules, causing their displacement as DDABr in various amounts, which can be as high as 40% (achieved with oleylphosphonic acid). Despite the stripping of DDA ligands, the optical properties of the nanocrystals, as well as structure and morphology, remain substantially unaffected, empirically demonstrating the defect tolerance characterizing such materials. Our study provides not only a clear overview on the interaction between perovskite nanocrystals and neutral ligands but also presents an effective ligand stripping strategy.
We have quantum chemically studied the effect of various polar and apolar solvents on the shape of the potential energy surface (PES) of a diverse collection of archetypal nucleophilic substitution reactions at carbon, silicon, phosphorus, and arsenic by using density functional theory at the OLYP/TZ2P level. In the gas phase, all our model SN2 reactions have single‐well PESs, except for the nucleophilic substitution reaction at carbon (SN2@C), which has a double‐well energy profile. The presence of the solvent can have a significant effect on the shape of the PES and, thus, on the nature of the SN2 process. Solvation energies, charges on the nucleophile or leaving group, and structural features are compared for the various SN2 reactions in a spectrum of solvents. We demonstrate how solvation can change the shape of the PES, depending not only on the polarity of the solvent, but also on how the charge is distributed over the interacting molecular moieties during different stages of the reaction. In the case of a nucleophilic substitution at three‐coordinate phosphorus, the reaction can be made to proceed through a single‐well [no transition state (TS)], bimodal barrier (two TSs), and then through a unimodal transition state (one TS) simply by increasing the polarity of the solvent.
We present a workflow to aid the discovery of new dyes for the role of a photosensitive unit in the dye-sensitized photo-electrochemical cells (DS-PECs). New structures are generated in a fully automated way using the Compound Attachment Tool (CAT) introduced in this work. These structures are characterized with efficient approximate density functional theory (DFT) methods, and molecules with favorable optical properties are suggested for possible further use in DS-PECs. As around 2500 structures are generated in this work, and as we aim for still larger volumes of compounds to screen in subsequent applications, we have assessed the reliability of low-cost screening methods and show that simplified time-dependent density functional theory (sTDDFT) provides a satisfying accuracy/cost ratio. From the dyes considered, we propose a set that can be suitable for panchromatic sensitization of the photoelectrode in DS-PECs to further increase DS-PEC efficiency.
A methodology for the direct introduction of the trifluoromethyl group on to indole scaffolds is presented. The procedure involves the use of sodium trifluoromethylsulfinate (Langlois reagent) as the source of the trifluoromethyl radical, and is performed photochemically with 2-tert-butylanthraquinone as a photocatalyst. The reaction has also been probed computationally. Reaction kinetics and molecular orbital analyses from our quantum chemical computations successfully predict and rationalize the formation of the experimentally observed product and, in the case of 1-methylbenzimidazole, even reproduce the same qualitative trends in regioisomer preference. Lefebvre later reported a hydrotrifluoromethylation method which
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