The electronic disorder landscape of mixed halide perovskite
ORAL
Abstract
Bandgap tunability of lead mixed-halide perovskites makes them promising candidates for various applications in optoelectronics since they exhibit sharp optical absorption onsets despite the presence of disorder from halide alloying. Here we use localization landscape theory to reveal that the static disorder due to compositional alloying for Iodide:Bromide perovskite contributes at most 3 meV to the Urbach energy. Our modelling reveals that the reason for this small contribution is due to the small effective masses in perovskites, resulting in a natural length scale of around 20nm for the “effective confining potential” for electrons and holes, with short range potential fluctuations smoothed out. The increase in Urbach energy across the compositional range agrees well with our optical absorption measurements. We model systems of sizes up to 80 nm in three dimensions, allowing us to explore halide segregation, accurately reproducing the experimentally observed absorption spectra and demonstrating the scope of our method to model electronic structures on large length scales. Our results suggest that we should look beyond static contribution and focus on the dynamic temperature dependent contribution to the Urbach energy.
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Publication: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2210.08705
Presenters
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Yun Liu
Institute of High Performance Computing
Authors
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Yun Liu
Institute of High Performance Computing
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Jean-Philippe Banon
École Polytechnique
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Kyle Frohna
University of Cambridge
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Yu-Hsien Chiang
University of Cambridge
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Ganbaatar Tumen-Ulzii
University of Cambridge
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Samuel D Stranks
University of Cambridge
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Marcel Filoche
Ecole Polytechnique
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Richard H Friend
University of Cambridge