Resolving the Physical Origin of Octahedral Tilting in Halide Perovskites
Author(s) -
JungHoon Lee,
Nicholas C. Bristowe,
Jun Ho Lee,
SungHoon Lee,
Paul D. Bristowe,
Anthony K. Cheetham,
Hyun M. Jang
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b00968
Subject(s) - halide , octahedron , perovskite (structure) , steric effects , hydrogen bond , chemical physics , band gap , materials science , photovoltaic system , solar cell , tilt (camera) , chemistry , inorganic chemistry , crystallography , optoelectronics , molecule , crystal structure , stereochemistry , geometry , organic chemistry , ecology , biology , mathematics
© 2016 American Chemical Society.Hybrid perovskites are currently the fastest growing photovoltaic technology, having reached a solar cell efficiency of over 20%. One possible strategy to further improve the efficiency of perovskite solar cells is to tune the degree of octahedral tilting of the halide frame, since this in turn affects the optical band gap and carrier effective masses. It is commonly accepted that the ion sizes are the main control parameter influencing the degree of tilting in perovskites. Here we re-examine the origin of octahedral tilts in halide perovskites from systematic first-principles calculations. We find that while steric effects dominate the tilt magnitude in inorganic halides, hydrogen bonding between an organic A-cation and the halide frame plays a significant role in hybrids. For example, in the case of MAPbI3, our calculations suggest that, without the contribution from hydrogen bonding, the octahedra would not tilt at all. These results demonstrate that tuning the degree of hydrogen bonding can be used as an additional control parameter to optimize the photovoltaic properties of perovskites
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