Disentangling the effects of structure and lone-pair electrons in the lattice dynamics of halide perovskites.
Sebastián Caicedo-DávilaAdi CohenSilvia G MottiMasahiko IsobeKyle M McCallManuel GrumetMaksym V KovalenkoOmer YaffeLaura M HerzDouglas H FabiniDavid R ReichmanPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Halide perovskites show great optoelectronic performance, but their favorable properties are paired with unusually strong anharmonicity. It was proposed that this combination derives from the ns 2 electron configuration of octahedral cations and associated pseudo-Jahn-Teller effect. We show that such cations are not a prerequisite for the strong anharmonicity and low-energy lattice dynamics encountered in these materials. We combine X-ray diffraction, infrared and Raman spectroscopies, and molecular dynamics to contrast the lattice dynamics of CsSrBr 3 with those of CsPbBr 3 , two compounds that are structurally similar but with the former lacking ns 2 cations with the propensity to form electron lone pairs. We exploit low-frequency diffusive Raman scattering, nominally symmetry-forbidden in the cubic phase, as a fingerprint of anharmonicity and reveal that low-frequency tilting occurs irrespective of octahedral cation electron configuration. This highlights the role of structure in perovskite lattice dynamics, providing design rules for the emerging class of soft perovskite semiconductors.