Light-induced picosecond rotational disordering of the inorganic sublattice in hybrid perovskites

Wu, Xiaoxi; Tan, Liang Z.; Shen, Xiaozhe; Hu, Te; Miyata, Kiyoshi; Trinh, M. Tuan; Li, Renkai; Coffee, Ryan; Liu, Shi; Egger, David A.; Makasyuk, Igor; Zheng, Qiang; Fry, Alan; Robinson, Joseph S.; Smith, Matthew D.; Guzelturk, Burak; Karunadasa, Hemamala I.; Wang, Xijie; Zhu, Xiaoyang; Kronik, Leeor; Rappe, Andrew M.; Lindenberg, Aaron M.
2017
SCIENCE ADVANCES
DOI
10.1126/sciadv.1602388
Femtosecond resolution electron scattering techniques are applied to resolve the first atomic-scale steps following absorption of a photon in the prototypical hybrid perovskite methylammonium lead iodide. Following above-gap photoexcitation, we directly resolve the transfer of energy from hot carriers to the lattice by recording changes in the mean square atomic displacements on 10-ps time scales. Measurements of the time-dependent pair distribution function show an unexpected broadening of the iodine-iodine correlation function while preserving the Pb-I distance. This indicates the formation of a rotationally disordered halide octahedral structure developing on picosecond time scales. This work shows the important role of light-induced structural deformations within the inorganic sublattice in elucidating the unique optoelectronic functionality exhibited by hybrid perovskites and provides new understanding of hot carrier-lattice interactions, which fundamentally determine solar cell efficiencies.