Hybrid Halide Perovskites: Fundamental Theory and Materials Design
Marina R. Filip, George Volonakis, Feliciano Giustino

TL;DR
This paper reviews the fundamental theory and materials design strategies for hybrid halide perovskites, emphasizing their optoelectronic properties and potential for various applications, especially in high-efficiency photovoltaics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of ab initio computational modeling insights guiding the design of novel perovskite materials with tailored properties.
Findings
Perovskite solar cells have achieved over 22.7% efficiency.
Organic-inorganic lead-halide perovskites have ideal optoelectronic properties.
Computational modeling aids in understanding and designing new perovskite materials.
Abstract
Hybrid organic-inorganic halide perovskites have emerged as a disruptive new class of materials, exhibiting optimum properties for a broad range of optoelectronic applications, most notably for photovoltaics. The first report of highly efficient organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells in 2012 marked a new era for photovoltaics research, reporting a power conversion efficiency of over 10%. Only five years after this discovery, perovskite photovoltaic devices have reached a certified efficiency of 22.7%, making them the first solution processable technology to surpass thin film and multi-crystalline silicon solar cells. The remarkable development of perovskite solar cells is due to the ideal optoelectronic properties of organic-inorganic lead-halide perovskites. The prototypical compound, methylammonium lead iodide, CH3NH3PbI3 is a direct band gap semiconductor with a band gap in the…
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