Design Rules for Optimizing Quaternary Mixed-Metal Chalcohalides
Pascal Henkel, Jingrui Li, Patrick Rinke

TL;DR
This study combines density functional theory and machine learning to establish compositional and structural design rules for quaternary mixed-metal chalcohalides, aiming to optimize their properties for photovoltaic applications.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic approach to identify how compositional variations influence properties, providing new design rules for lead-free and lead-based chalcohalides.
Findings
P21/c phase is the most stable at low temperatures.
Cmcm and Cmc21 phases have smaller band gaps and more direct gaps.
Electron acceptor sites (Ch and X) are key in property determination.
Abstract
Quaternary mixed-metal M(II)2M(III)Ch2X3 chalcohalides are an emerging material class for photovoltaic absorbers that combines the beneficial optoelectronic properties of lead-based halide perovskites with the stability of metal chalcogenides. Inspired by the recent discovery of lead-free mixed-metal chalcohalides materials, we utilized a combination of density functional theory and machine learning to determine compositional trends and chemical design rules in the lead-free and lead-based materials spaces. We explored a total of 54 M(II)2M(III)Ch2X3 materials with M(II) = Sn, Pb, M(III) = In, Sb, Bi, Ch = S, Se, Te, and X = Cl, Br, I per phase (Cmcm, Cmc21 , and P21/c). The P21/c phase is the equilibrium phase at low temperatures, followed by Cmc21 and Cmcm. The fundamental band gaps in Cmcm and Cmc21 are smaller than those in P21/c, but direct band gaps are more common in Cmcm and…
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