The thermodynamic trends of intrinsic defects in primary halide perovskites: A first-principles study
Haibo Xue, Geert Brocks, Shuxia Tao

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates intrinsic defects in six primary halide perovskites using first-principles calculations, revealing defect formation trends, dominant defect types, and their impact on electronic properties relevant for optoelectronic device performance.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of defect formation energies and charge transition levels across different halide perovskites, highlighting how compositional changes influence defect physics.
Findings
Dominant defects vary with halide composition.
All compounds are mildly p-doped, except MASnI3.
Some defects create deep donor traps, but are rare in iodine-based perovskites.
Abstract
Defects in halide perovskites play an essential role in determining the efficiency and stability of the resulting optoelectronic devices. Here, we present a systematic study of intrinsic point defects in six primary metal halide perovskites, MAPbI, MAPbBr, MAPbCl, FAPbI, CsPbI and MASnI, using density functional theory calculations with the SCAN+rVV10 functional. We analyse the impact of changing anions and cations on the defect formation energies and the charge state transitions levels and identify the physical origins underlying the observed trends. Dominant defects in the lead-iodide compounds are the A cation interstitials (A = Cs, MA, FA), charge-compensated by I interstitials or lead vacancies. In the lead-bromide and -chloride compounds, halide vacancies become relatively more prominent, and for MAPbBr, the Pb interstitial also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPerovskite Materials and Applications
