We show that spin-orbit coupling in methylammonium lead-iodide perovskite generates Fermi surfaces of peculiar topology: for the low charge-injection regime of interest for photovoltaic applications, the Fermi surfaces are donuts (ring tori), which evolve into apples (spindle tori) as the band population is raised, with a vortex spin texture that indicates the dominance of the Rashba effect. This material is a significant example of a bulk system, where despite the lack of any macroscopic field, a strong Rashba effect shows up, originated by a local dipole field on Pb and I orbitals, with the field direction locked to the vortex point loci in k-space. Remarkably, the same Fermi surface topology and spin helicity characterize both electrons and holes: this makes the presence of Rashba compatible with the direct band gap behavior described by photoluminescence experiments
Donuts and Spin Vortices at the Fermi Surfaces of Hybrid LeadIodide CH3NH3PbI3 Perovskites
Filippetti, A.;Caddeo, C.;Bosin, A.;
2019-01-01
Abstract
We show that spin-orbit coupling in methylammonium lead-iodide perovskite generates Fermi surfaces of peculiar topology: for the low charge-injection regime of interest for photovoltaic applications, the Fermi surfaces are donuts (ring tori), which evolve into apples (spindle tori) as the band population is raised, with a vortex spin texture that indicates the dominance of the Rashba effect. This material is a significant example of a bulk system, where despite the lack of any macroscopic field, a strong Rashba effect shows up, originated by a local dipole field on Pb and I orbitals, with the field direction locked to the vortex point loci in k-space. Remarkably, the same Fermi surface topology and spin helicity characterize both electrons and holes: this makes the presence of Rashba compatible with the direct band gap behavior described by photoluminescence experimentsFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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