Temperature-Dependent Chirality in Halide Perovskites.
Mike PolsGeert BrocksSofía CaleroShuxia TaoPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2024)
With the use of chiral organic cations in two-dimensional metal halide perovskites, chirality can be induced in the metal halide layers, which results in semiconductors with intriguing chiral optical and spin-selective transport properties. The chiral properties strongly depend upon the temperature, despite the basic crystal symmetry not changing fundamentally. We identify a set of descriptors that characterize the chirality of metal halide perovskites, such as MBA 2 PbI 4 , and study their temperature dependence using molecular dynamics simulations with on-the-fly machine-learning force fields obtained from density functional theory calculations. We find that, whereas the arrangement of organic cations remains chiral upon increasing the temperature, the inorganic framework loses this property more rapidly. We ascribe this to the breaking of hydrogen bonds that link the organic with the inorganic substructures, which leads to a loss of chirality transfer.
Keyphrases
- solar cells
- density functional theory
- perovskite solar cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- ionic liquid
- water soluble
- molecular dynamics
- capillary electrophoresis
- machine learning
- molecular docking
- high resolution
- single molecule
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- big data
- deep learning