Structure and electronic tunability of acene alkylamine based layered hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites from first principles

Abstract

Twelve layered hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites combining oligoacene derivatives [phenylmethylammonium (PMA), naphthylmethylammonium (NMA), anthrylmethylammonium (AMA), and tetrylmethylammonium (TMA)] and lead halides (Cl-, Br-, and I- anions) are investigated by first-principles density functional theory (DFT), showing broad, rational tunability of band gap, quantum well type, and spin-dependent energy band properties. Six compounds are known from previous syntheses and are used to devise a computational search space for likely low-energy structures. Among the six known compounds, a refined structure is identified for (NMA)2PbCl4 and a new, lower-energy structure is suggested for (AMA)2PbCl4. The DFT based search methodology is next applied to predict the likely structures for the six unknown compounds. Computationally predicted energy levels for all 12 compounds from spin-orbit coupled hybrid DFT reveal tunable type I quantum well alignments, with frontier orbitals located on the inorganic component, on the organic component, or on both, as controlled by cation and anion selection. Several structures spontaneously break local and global inversion symmetry, causing strong spin splitting of the conduction bands [up to 0.12 eV for (PMA)2PbCl4] and showing potential for spin-dependent transport properties and future spintronic and tunable chiroptical applications.

DOI
10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.7.084601
Year