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Mechanism of Interaction of Water above the Methylammonium Lead Iodide Perovskite Nanocluster: Size Effect and Water-Induced Defective States
Abstract
Water is often viewed as detrimental to organic halide perovskite stability. However, evidence highlights its efficacy as a solvent during organic perovskite liquid synthesis. This paradox prompts an investigation into water’s influence on perovskite nanoclusters. Employing first principle calculations and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, surprisingly, we discover some subsurface layers of methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3) nanoclusters exhibit stronger relaxation than surface layers. Moreover, a strong quantum confinement effect enhances the band gap of MAPbI3 as the nanocluster size decreases. Notably, the water molecules above MAPbI3 nanoclusters induce rich localized defect states, generating low-lying shallow states above the valence band for the small amounts of surface water molecules and band-like deep states across the whole gap for large nanoclusters. This work provides insights into water’s role in the electronic structure and structural evolution of perovskite nanoclusters, aiding the design of water-resistant layers to protect perovskite quantum dots from ambient humidity- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biophysics
- Ecology
- Inorganic Chemistry
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Physical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- work provides insights
- molecular dynamics simulations
- methylammonium lead iodide
- lying shallow states
- ab initio </
- nanocluster size decreases
- 3 </ sub
- surface water molecules
- water molecules
- surface layers
- size effect
- whole gap
- water ’
- subsurface layers
- structural evolution
- small amounts
- resistant layers
- perovskite nanoclusters
- paradox prompts
- often viewed
- large nanoclusters
- generating low
- evidence highlights
- electronic structure
- ambient humidity