57 research outputs found
Principles of Chemical Bonding and Band Gap Engineering in Hybrid Organic–Inorganic Halide Perovskites
The performance of solar cells based on hybrid halide perovskites has seen an unparalleled rate of progress, while our understanding of the underlying physical chemistry of these materials trails behind. Superficially, CH3NH3PbI3 is similar to other thin-film photovoltaic materials: a semiconductor with an optical band gap in the optimal region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Microscopically, the material is more unconventional. Progress in our understanding of the local and long-range chemical bonding of hybrid perovskites is discussed here, drawing from a series of computational studies involving electronic structure, molecular dynamics, and Monte Carlo simulation techniques. The orientational freedom of the dipolar methylammonium ion gives rise to temperature-dependent dielectric screening and the possibility for the formation of polar (ferroelectric) domains. The ability to independently substitute on the A, B, and X lattice sites provides the means to tune the optoelectronic properties. Finally, ten critical challenges and opportunities for physical chemists are highlighted
Inversion symmetry and bulk Rashba effect in methylammonium lead iodide perovskite single crystals
Methylammonium lead iodide perovskite (MAPbI_3) exhibits long charge carrier lifetimes that are linked to its high efficiency in solar cells. Yet, the mechanisms governing these unusual carrier dynamics are not completely understood. A leading hypothesis—disproved in this work—is that a large, static bulk Rashba effect slows down carrier recombination. Here, using second harmonic generation rotational anisotropy measurements on MAPbI_3 crystals, we demonstrate that the bulk structure of tetragonal MAPbI_3 is centrosymmetric with I4/mcmspace group. Our calculations show that a significant Rashba splitting in the bandstructure requires a non-centrosymmetric lead iodide framework, and that incorrect structural relaxations are responsible for the previously predicted large Rashba effect. The small Rashba splitting allows us to compute effective masses in excellent agreement with experiment. Our findings rule out the presence of a large static Rashba effect in bulk MAPbI_3, and our measurements find no evidence of dynamic Rashba effects
Neutron diffraction and thermal studies of amorphous
We have succeeded in preparing amorphous carbon disulphide
(\chem{CS_2}) by depositing its vapour on a cold substrate at
10\un{K}. Complete formation of the amorphous state has been
confirmed by neutron diffraction and differential thermal
analysis (DTA). The amorphous sample crystallised at ca.
70\un{K}, which is lower than the hypothetical glass transition
temperature (92\un{K}) estimated from the DTA data of the
(\chem{CS_2})x(\chem{S_2Cl_2}) binary mixture.
\chem{CS_2}, a symmetric linear tri-atomic molecule, is the simplest
of the amorphised molecular substances whose structural and
thermal information has been reported so far. Comparison of the
static structure factors has shown that the orientational
correlation of \chem{CS_2} molecules may be much stronger in the
amorphous state than in the liquid state at higher temperature
Calorimetric study of phase transitions in the thiourea 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane clathrate compound
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