卤化物
材料科学
纳米技术
光电子学
化学
无机化学
作者
Xueguang Chen,Linhan Lin,Guan-Yao Huang,Xiaomei Chen,Xiao-Ze Li,Yun-Ke Zhou,Yixuan Zou,Tairan Fu,Peng Li,Zhengcao Li,Hong‐Bo Sun
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-48110-w
摘要
Crystallization is a fundamental phenomenon which describes how the atomic building blocks such as atoms and molecules are arranged into ordered or quasi-ordered structure and form solid-state materials. While numerous studies have focused on the nucleation behavior, the precise and spatiotemporal control of growth kinetics, which dictates the defect density, the micromorphology, as well as the properties of the grown materials, remains elusive so far. Herein, we propose an optical strategy, termed optofluidic crystallithography (OCL), to solve this fundamental problem. Taking halide perovskites as an example, we use a laser beam to manipulate the molecular motion in the native precursor environment and create inhomogeneous spatial distribution of the molecular species. Harnessing the coordinated effect of laser-controlled local supersaturation and interfacial energy, we precisely steer the ionic reaction at the growth interface and directly print arbitrary single crystals of halide perovskites of high surface quality, crystallinity, and uniformity at a high printing speed of 10
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