AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the temperature dependence of the band gap in all-inorganic perovskites, like CsPbI, is crucial for their use in various optoelectronic and photovoltaic applications.
  • A recent study shows that as temperature increases from 300 K to 750 K, the band gap of perovskites changes due to structural fluctuations, particularly noting a significant difference at high temperatures (around 177 meV at 600 K).
  • Despite these changes, the band gap only slightly increases with rising temperatures (about 26 meV from 600 K to 750 K), indicating that the structural fluctuations are not very sensitive to temperature changes due to the stable chemical properties of the Pb-I bonds.

Article Abstract

Understanding the micro-mechanism of the temperature dependence of the band gap in all-inorganic perovskites is of great significance for their optoelectronic and photovoltaic applications in various temperature environments. Herein, based on the recently developed electron-phonon renormalization method, the temperature-dependent band gaps of the optoelectronic perovskite CsPbI are studied from 300 K to 750 K (including orthorhombic, tetragonal, and cubic phases). It is found that the temperature-induced structural fluctuation makes the structure of perovskites deviate from the 0 K one, and the corresponding renormalized band gap differs from that at 0 K, especially for the high-temperature cubic phase (, Δ is ∼177 meV at 600 K). However, within the temperature range of each CsPbI phase, the band gap is enlarged slightly with the increase of temperature (, Δ is ∼26 meV from 600 K to 750 K for the cubic phase), showing the insensitivity of the structural fluctuation effect to the temperature change. The reason is that the chemical characters of band edges are determined by PbI, and due to the strong correlation between Pb and I, the Pb-I bond lengths and Pb-I-Pb bond angles are almost unchanged as the temperature increases. Our work provides a fundamental understanding of the temperature-dependent band gaps in all-inorganic perovskites and shed light on the commercialization of perovskites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2cp00940dDOI Listing

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