December 1 - 6, 2024
Boston, Massachusetts
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2024 MRS Fall Meeting & Exhibit
QT01.01.03

The Impact of Anisotropy and Anharmonicity on the Magneto-Optical Properties of Bulk 3D and 2D Lead Halide Perovskites

When and Where

Dec 2, 2024
11:15am - 11:45am
Sheraton, Fifth Floor, Jamaica Pond

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Efrat Lifshitz1,Shahar Zuri1,Alyssa Kostadiniv-Mutzafi1,Liang Z Tan2,Leeor Kronik3

Technion–Israel Institute of Technology1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2,Weizmann Institute of Science3

Abstract

Efrat Lifshitz1,Shahar Zuri1,Alyssa Kostadiniv-Mutzafi1,Liang Z Tan2,Leeor Kronik3

Technion–Israel Institute of Technology1,Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2,Weizmann Institute of Science3
The renaissance of interest in halide perovskites, triggered by their unprecedented performance in optoelectronic applications, elicited worldwide efforts to uncover various intriguing physical properties, with a particular interest in spin-orbit effects. The current work presents magneto-optical experimental evidence for anisotropic electron-hole interactions in the 3D orthorhombic MAPbBr<sub>3</sub> and the 2D (PEA)<sub>2</sub>PbI<sub>4</sub> bulk single crystals. The evidence was seen in the magneto-photoluminescence spectra while monitoring several different crystallographic directions. The observations exposed a highly non-linear response to a magnetic field and asymmetry to the influence of the sign of the magnetic field. A theoretical model implementing anisotropy in the electron-hole interaction, Rashba effect, Landé <i>g</i>-factors, and a lesser contribution from an Overhauser effect corroborated the experimental results.<br/>A continuation of the work involved the investigation of the anharmonic ground-state of the (PEA)<sub>2</sub>PbI<sub>4</sub> compound, using complementary information from low-temperature x-ray diffraction (XRD) to the photoluminescence spectroscopy, which was also supported by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The study extrapolated four crystallographic configurations from the low-temperature XRD. These configurations imply that the ground state has an intrinsic disorder stemming from two coexisting chiral sub-lattices, each with a bi-oriented organic spacer molecule. We further show evidence that these chiral structures form unevenly populated ground states, portraying uneven anharmonicity, where surface effects may tune the state population. Our results uncover a disorder that may be associated with a dynamic Rashba effect. The current efforts include using a unique pump-probe experiment to follow a dynamic Rashba effect. Also, preliminary magneto-photoluminescence of (F-PEA)<sub>2</sub>PbI<sub>4</sub> uncovered two opposing chiral structures alone through the entire temperature range under investigation. This result was already corroborated by XRD measurements, confirming the locking of the F-PEA degree of freedom. Further study is ongoing regarding the relation between anharmonicity, the Rashba effect, and the dependence on structure and composition.

Keywords

crystallographic structure | spectroscopy

Symposium Organizers

Volker Blum, Duke University
Sascha Feldmann, Harvard University
Paulina Plochocka, CNRS
Tze Chien Sum, Nanyang Technological University

Symposium Support

Silver
Light Conversion
FHI-aims - First-Principles Materials Simulations
Quantum Design

Session Chairs

Matthew Beard
Volker Blum

In this Session