Abstract

Abstract 3D hybrid lead halides have emerged as promising photofunctional materials; however, the 3D structural prototypes remain scarce due to the stringent requirements for organic cations to fit within the framework cavities and stabilize PbX 6 networks. Moreover, their ionic‐bound nature and highly symmetric PbX 6 units often result in structural instability and suppressed C─C coupling capabilities, posing significant challenges for photocatalytic CO 2 ‐to‐C 2+ conversion in aqueous environments. Herein, a heterometallic crystal engineering strategy is presented for the coordination‐driven assembly of two 3D M I /M II bimetallic halides with the general formula Pb 6 Cu 4 X 10 (ida) 3 (ida = iminodiacetate, X = Cl − /Br − ). The embedding of cubane‐type [Cu 4 X 4 ] clusters within the lead halide frameworks via covalent Pb II –X–Cu I linkages result in decreased exciton binding energies, smaller Huang–Rhys factors, and extended photoluminescence lifetimes, which suppress exciton trapping and facilitate carrier transport. Both M I /M II halide frameworks feature asymmetric, halogen‐bridged heterobimetallic sites (Pb II ─X─Cu I ) with intrinsic charge polarization, which facilitate C─C coupling during CO 2 photoreduction by stabilizing the key *COCOH intermediates. As a result, these heterobimetallic architectures enable highly selective photocatalytic CO 2 ‐to‐C 2 H 4 conversion, achieving up to 95% selectivity in pure water. This work demonstrates a viable strategy for atomic‐level engineering of 3D metal halides toward solar‐driven C 2 fuel production.

Keywords

CO2 photoreductioncoordination polymerscrystal engineeringmetal halide hybridsphotocatalysis

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Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
article
Pages
e16054-e16054
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Dongyang Li, Wen Ma, Jinlin Yin et al. (2025). Embedding Cu <sub>4</sub> X <sub>4</sub> Cubane Clusters into Lead Halide Lattices: Stable 3D Cu‐Pb Bimetallic Halide Frameworks for Photocatalytic CO <sub>2</sub> ‐to‐Ethylene Conversion in Water. Advanced Materials , e16054-e16054. https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202516054

Identifiers

DOI
10.1002/adma.202516054
PMID
41367153

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Data completeness: 77%