Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2020; Denver, Colorado
Session D63: Theory and Computation of Hybrid Perovskites
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 2, 2020
Room: Mile High Ballroom 4D
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Aron Walsh, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Abstract: D63.00006 : Calculating band gap distributions of halide perovskites with a first-principles tight-binding approach
Presenter:
Maximilian Schilcher
(Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich)
Authors:
Maximilian Schilcher
(Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich)
Matthew Z. Mayers
(Department of Chemistry, Columbia University)
Liang Tan
(Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
David Reichman
(Department of Chemistry, Columbia University)
David Alexander Egger
(Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich)
Halide perovskites (HaPs) exhibit intriguing optoelectronic properties that cannot yet be fully explained on a microscopic level. Understanding the characteristics of HaPs is possible with well-established conventional theoretical calculations, such as density functional theory (DFT), but their applicability to large-scale simulations is often limited by their computational costs. Here, building on previous work [1] we put forward a tight binding (TB) approach as a computationally efficient tool to model large-scale system sizes and calculate optoelectronic properties of HaPs. Parametrizing the TB model with DFT calculations and unifying it with force-field molecular dynamics, we compute dynamic band gap distributions for several HaPs as well as their dependence on temperature. This helps resolving confluences of small Urbach energies and large amounts of nuclear disorder in HaPs around room temperature.
References
[1] M. Z. Mayers, L. Z. Tan, D. A. Egger, A. M. Rappe and D. R. Reichman. How Lattice and Charge Fluctuations Control Carrier Dynamics in Halide Perovskites. Nano Lett. 18, 8041 – 8046 (2018).
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