posted on 2018-02-20, 00:00authored byLihong Liu, Wei-Hai Fang, Run Long, Oleg V. Prezhdo
Nonradiative electron–hole
recombination plays a key role
in determining photon conversion efficiencies in solar cells. Experiments
demonstrate significant reduction in the recombination rate upon passivation
of methylammonium lead iodide perovskite with Lewis base molecules.
Using nonadiabatic molecular dynamics combined with time-domain density
functional theory, we find that the nonradiative charge recombination
is decelerated by an order of magnitude upon adsorption of the molecules.
Thiophene acts by the traditional passivation mechanism, forcing electron
density away from the surface. In contrast, pyridine localizes the
electron at the surface while leaving it energetically near the conduction
band edge. This is because pyridine creates a stronger coordinative
bond with a lead atom of the perovskite and has a lower energy unoccupied
orbital compared with thiophene due to the more electronegative nitrogen
atom relative to thiophene’s sulfur. Both molecules reduce
two-fold the nonadiabatic coupling and electronic coherence time.
A broad range of vibrational modes couple to the electronic subsystem,
arising from inorganic and organic components. The simulations reveal
the atomistic mechanisms underlying the enhancement of the excited-state
lifetime achieved by the perovskite passivation, rationalize the experimental
results, and advance our understanding of charge-phonon dynamics in
perovskite solar cells.