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Defect Tolerance of Lead-Halide Perovskite (100)...
Journal article

Defect Tolerance of Lead-Halide Perovskite (100) Surface Relative to Bulk: Band Bending, Surface States, and Characteristics of Vacancies

Abstract

We characterized the formation of vacancies at a surface slab model and contrasted the results with the bulk of lead-halide perovskites by using cubic and tetragonal CsPbI3 as representative structures. The defect-free CsI-terminated (100) surface does not trap charge carriers. In the presence of defects (vacancies), the surface is expected to exhibit a p-type behavior. The formation energy of cesium vacancies V Cs – is lower at the surface than in the bulk, while iodine vacancies V I + have a similar energy (around 0.25–0.4 eV) within the range of chemical potentials compatible with solution processing synthesis conditions. Lead–iodine divacancies (V PbI –) are expected to dominate lead-only vacancies at the surfaces. Major surface vacancies create shallow host-like energy states with a small Franck–Condon shift, making them electronically harmless (same as in bulk). The spin–orbit coupling contributes to the defect tolerance of lead-halide perovskite surfaces by causing delocalization of electronic states associated with n-type defects and retraction of the lowest unoccupied states from the surface due to a mixing of Pb-p x,y,z orbitals. These results explain a high optoelectronic performance of two-dimensional structures, nanoparticles, and polycrystalline thin films of lead-halide perovskites despite the abundance of interfaces in these materials.

Authors

Rubel O; Rocquefelte X

Journal

The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, Vol. 128, No. 13, pp. 5667–5679

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

April 4, 2024

DOI

10.1021/acs.jpcc.3c06068

ISSN

1932-7447

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