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91探花
Calculated exciton wave function in a hybrid organic-inorganic layered halide perovskite
Credit: Figure created with VESTA; calculations performed with the BerkeleyGW code

Marina Filip

Professor of Physics

Research theme

  • Photovoltaics and nanoscience

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Computational Condensed Matter Physics Group
  • Advanced Device Concepts for Next-Generation Photovoltaics
marina.filip@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room 109
  • About
  • Publications

Tailoring a Lead-Free Organic鈥揑norganic Halobismuthate for Large Piezoelectric Effect

Journal of the American Chemical Society American Chemical Society 147:49 (2025) 45366-45376

Authors:

Esther YH Hung, Benjamin M Gallant, Robert Harniman, Jakob Mo虉bs, Santanu Saha, Khaled Kaja, Charles Godfrey, Shrestha Banerjee, Nikolaos Famakidis, Harish Bhaskaran, Marina R Filip, Paolo Radaelli, Nakita K Noel, Dominik J Kubicki, Harry C Sansom, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

Molecular piezoelectrics are a potentially disruptive technology, enabling a new generation of self-powered electronics that are flexible, high performing, and inherently low in toxicity. Although significant efforts have been made toward understanding their structural design by targeted manipulation of phase transition behavior, the resulting achievable piezoresponse has remained limited. In this work, we use a low-symmetry, zero-dimensional (0D) inorganic framework alongside a carefully selected 鈥榪uasi-spherical鈥 organic cation to manipulate organic鈥搃norganic interactions and thus form the hybrid, piezoelectric material [(CH3)3NCH2I]3Bi2I9. Using variable鈥搕emperature single crystal X-ray diffraction and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we demonstrate that this material simultaneously exhibits an order鈥揹isorder and displacive symmetry-breaking phase transition. This phase transition is mediated by halogen bonding between the organic and inorganic frameworks and results in a large piezoelectric response, d 33 = 161.5 pm/V. This value represents a 4-fold improvement on previously reported halobismuthate piezoelectrics and is comparable to those of commercial inorganic piezoelectrics, thus offering a new pathway toward low-cost, low-toxicity mechanical energy harvesting and actuating devices.

Tuning the quantum-well structure of single-crystal layered perovskite heterostructures

Journal of the American Chemical Society American Chemical Society 147:44 (2025) 40171-40181

Authors:

Arundhati P Deshmukh, Yinan Chen, Jamie L Cleron, Monique Tie, Jiajia Wen, Tony F Heinz, Marina R Filip, Hemamala I Karunadasa

Abstract:

Single-crystal layered perovskite heterostructures provide a scalable platform for potentially realizing emergent properties recently seen in mechanically stacked monolayers. We report two new layered perovskite heterostructures M2(PbCl2)(AMCHC)2(PbCl4)路2贬2O (1_M聽where M = Na+, Li+; AMCHC =聽+NH3CH2C6H10COO鈥) crystallizing in the chiral, polar space group聽C2. The heterostructures exhibit alternating layers of a lead-chloride perovskite and an intergrowth comprising corner-sharing PbCl4(畏2-COO)2聽polyhedra with bridging equatorial chlorides and terminal axial oxygen ligands. Small alkali metal cations and water molecules occupy the cavities between the polyhedra in the intergrowth layer. The heterostructures display wide bandgaps, two closely spaced excitonic features in their optical spectra, and strong second harmonic generation. The calculated band structure of聽1_Na聽features a Type-I quantum-well structure, where the electron鈥揾ole correlation function corresponding to the lowest excited state points to electron鈥揾ole pairs localized within a single inorganic layer (intralayer excitons), as seen in typical layered halide perovskites. In contrast, calculations show that聽1_Li聽adopts a Type-II quantum-well structure, with electrons and holes in the lowest excited state residing in different inorganic layers (interlayer excitons). Calculations on model complexes suggest that these changes in band alignment, between Type-I and Type-II quantum-well structures, are driven by the placement of the alkali metal and the orientation of the water molecules, changing the electrostatic potential-energy profiles of the heterostructures. Thus, this study sets the stage for accessing different alignments of the perovskite and intergrowth bands in bulk perovskite heterostructures that self-assemble in solution.

Ruddlesden鈥揚opper Defects Act as a Free Surface: Role in Formation and Photophysical Properties of CsPbI 3

Advanced Materials Wiley (2025) 2501788

Authors:

Weilun Li, Qimu Yuan, Yinan Chen, Joshua RS Lilly, Marina R Filip, Laura M Herz, Michael B Johnston, Joanne Etheridge

Abstract:

The perovskite semiconductor, CsPbI3, holds excellent promise for solar cell applications due to its suitable bandgap. However, achieving phase鈥恠table CsPbI3 solar cells with high power conversion efficiency remains a major challenge. Ruddlesden鈥揚opper (RP) defects have been identified in a range of perovskite semiconductors, including CsPbI3. However, there is limited understanding as to why they form or their impact on stability and photophysical properties. Here, the prevalence of RP defects is increased with increased Cs鈥恊xcess in vapor鈥恉eposited CsPbI3 thin films while superior structural stability but inferior photophysical properties are observed. Significantly, using electron microscopy, it is found that the atomic positions at the planar defect are comparable to those of a free surface, revealing their role in phase stabilization. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal the RP planes are electronically benign, however, antisites observed at RP turning points are likely to be malign. Therefore it is proposed that increasing RP planes while reducing RP turning points offers a breakthrough for improving both phase stability and photophysical performance. The formation mechanism revealed here can apply more generally to RP structures in other perovskite systems.

Ultrafast Spontaneous Exciton Dissociation via Phonon Emission in BiVO$_4$

(2025)

Authors:

Stephen E Gant, Antonios M Alvertis, Christopher JN Coveney, Jonah B Haber, Marina R Filip, Jeffrey B Neaton

Ruddlesden-Popper defects act as a free surface: role in formation and photophysical properties of CsPbI3

(2025)

Authors:

Weilun Li, Qimu Yuan, Yinan Chen, Joshua RS Lilly, Marina R Filip, Laura M Herz, Michael B Johnston, Joanne Etheridge

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