Rashba Band Splitting and Bulk Photovoltaic Effect Induced by Halogen Bonds in Hybrid Layered Perovskites

Author:

Xue Jie1,Huang Yuling2,Liu Yang3,Chen Zhongwei1,Sung Herman H.‐Y.1,Williams Ian D.1,Zhu Zonglong4,Mao Lingling3,Chen Xihan2,Lu Haipeng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Clear Water Bay, Kowloon 999077 Hong Kong (SAR) China

2. SUSTech Energy Institute for Carbon Neutrality Department of Mechanical and Energy Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen 518055 P. R. China

3. Department of Chemistry Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen 518055 P. R. China

4. Department of Chemistry City University of Hong Kong Kowloon 999077 Hong Kong Hong Kong

Abstract

AbstractNon‐covalent interactions play an essential role in directing the self‐assembly of hybrid organic–inorganic crystals. In hybrid halide perovskites, hydrogen bonding has been the paramount non‐covalent interaction. Here, we show another non‐covalent interaction, namely, the halogen bond interaction, that directs a symmetry‐breaking assembly in a new series of two‐dimensional (2D) perovskites (ICH2CH2NH3)2(CH3NH3)n−1PbnI3n+1 (n is the layer thickness, n=1–4). Structural analysis shows that the halogen bond strength varies with the layer thickness. For the odd number (n=1, 3) layered perovskites, stronger halogen interaction leads to centrosymmetric structures, whereas for the n=2 layered perovskites, weaker halogen bonds result in non‐centrosymmetric structures. Transient reflection spectroscopy shows a suppressed radiative recombination rate (k2≈0) and prolonged spin lifetime for n=2 structure, suggesting an enhanced Rashba band splitting effect. The structural asymmetry is further confirmed with a reversible bulk photovoltaic effect. Our work provides a new design strategy to enable hybrid perovskites with emerging properties and functionalities associated with structural asymmetry.

Funder

Young Scientists Fund

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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