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Featured researches published by Kiyoshi Miyata.


Science | 2016

Screening in crystalline liquids protects energetic carriers in hybrid perovskites

Haiming Zhu; Kiyoshi Miyata; Yongping Fu; Jue Wang; Prakriti P. Joshi; Daniel Niesner; Kristopher W. Williams; Song Jin; X.-Y. Zhu

Hybrid lead halide perovskites exhibit carrier properties that resemble those of pristine nonpolar semiconductors despite static and dynamic disorder, but how carriers are protected from efficient scattering with charged defects and optical phonons is unknown. Here, we reveal the carrier protection mechanism by comparing three single-crystal lead bromide perovskites: CH3NH3PbBr3, CH(NH2)2PbBr3, and CsPbBr3. We observed hot fluorescence emission from energetic carriers with ~102-picosecond lifetimes in CH3NH3PbBr3 or CH(NH2)2PbBr3, but not in CsPbBr3. The hot fluorescence is correlated with liquid-like molecular reorientational motions, suggesting that dynamic screening protects energetic carriers via solvation or large polaron formation on time scales competitive with that of ultrafast cooling. Similar protections likely exist for band-edge carriers. The long-lived energetic carriers may enable hot-carrier solar cells with efficiencies exceeding the Shockley-Queisser limit.


ACS central science | 2016

A Direct Mechanism of Ultrafast Intramolecular Singlet Fission in Pentacene Dimers

Eric G. Fuemmeler; Samuel N. Sanders; Andrew B. Pun; Elango Kumarasamy; Tao Zeng; Kiyoshi Miyata; Michael L. Steigerwald; X.-Y. Zhu; Luis M. Campos; Nandini Ananth

Interest in materials that undergo singlet fission (SF) has been catalyzed by the potential to exceed the Shockley–Queisser limit of solar power conversion efficiency. In conventional materials, the mechanism of SF is an intermolecular process (xSF), which is mediated by charge transfer (CT) states and depends sensitively on crystal packing or molecular collisions. In contrast, recently reported covalently coupled pentacenes yield ∼2 triplets per photon absorbed in individual molecules: the hallmark of intramolecular singlet fission (iSF). However, the mechanism of iSF is unclear. Here, using multireference electronic structure calculations and transient absorption spectroscopy, we establish that iSF can occur via a direct coupling mechanism that is independent of CT states. We show that a near-degeneracy in electronic state energies induced by vibronic coupling to intramolecular modes of the covalent dimer allows for strong mixing between the correlated triplet pair state and the local excitonic state, despite weak direct coupling.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Organic Cations Might Not Be Essential to the Remarkable Properties of Band Edge Carriers in Lead Halide Perovskites

Haiming Zhu; M. Tuan Trinh; Jue Wang; Yongping Fu; Prakriti P. Joshi; Kiyoshi Miyata; Song Jin; X.-Y. Zhu

A charge carrier in a lead halide perovskite lattice is protected as a large polaron responsible for the remarkable photophysical properties, irrespective of the cation type. All-inorganic-based APbX3 perovskites may mitigate the stability problem for their applications in solar cells and other optoelectronics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Long, Atomically Precise Donor-Acceptor Cove-Edge Nanoribbons as Electron Acceptors

Thomas J. Sisto; Yu Zhong; Boyuan Zhang; M. Tuan Trinh; Kiyoshi Miyata; Xinjue Zhong; X.-Y. Zhu; Michael L. Steigerwald; Fay Ng; Colin Nuckolls

This Communication describes a new molecular design for the efficient synthesis of donor-acceptor, cove-edge graphene nanoribbons and their properties in solar cells. These nanoribbons are long (∼5 nm), atomically precise, and soluble. The design is based on the fusion of electron deficient perylene diimide oligomers with an electron rich alkoxy pyrene subunit. This strategy of alternating electron rich and electron poor units facilitates a visible light fusion reaction in >95% yield, whereas the cove-edge nature of these nanoribbons results in a high degree of twisting along the long axis. The rigidity of the backbone yields a sharp longest wavelength absorption edge. These nanoribbons are exceptional electron acceptors, and organic photovoltaics fabricated with the ribbons show efficiencies of ∼8% without optimization.


Science Advances | 2017

Large polarons in lead halide perovskites

Kiyoshi Miyata; Daniele Meggiolaro; M. Tuan Trinh; Prakriti P. Joshi; Edoardo Mosconi; Skyler C. Jones; Filippo De Angelis; X.-Y. Zhu

Charge carriers in both hybrid and all-inorganic lead halide perovskites form large polarons. Lead halide perovskites show marked defect tolerance responsible for their excellent optoelectronic properties. These properties might be explained by the formation of large polarons, but how they are formed and whether organic cations are essential remain open questions. We provide a direct time domain view of large polaron formation in single-crystal lead bromide perovskites CH3NH3PbBr3 and CsPbBr3. We found that large polaron forms predominantly from the deformation of the PbBr3− frameworks, irrespective of the cation type. The difference lies in the polaron formation time, which, in CH3NH3PbBr3 (0.3 ps), is less than half of that in CsPbBr3 (0.7 ps). First-principles calculations confirm large polaron formation, identify the Pb-Br-Pb deformation modes as responsible, and explain quantitatively the rate difference between CH3NH3PbBr3 and CsPbBr3. The findings reveal the general advantage of the soft [PbX3]− sublattice in charge carrier protection and suggest that there is likely no mechanistic limitations in using all-inorganic or mixed-cation lead halide perovskites to overcome instability problems and to tune the balance between charge carrier protection and mobility.


Science Advances | 2017

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

Xiaoxi Wu; Liang Z. Tan; Xiaozhe Shen; Te Hu; Kiyoshi Miyata; M. Tuan Trinh; Renkai Li; Ryan Coffee; Shi Liu; David A. Egger; Igor Makasyuk; Qiang Zheng; Alan Fry; Matthew D. Smith; Burak Guzelturk; Hemamala I. Karunadasa; Xijie Wang; X.-Y. Zhu; Leeor Kronik; Andrew M. Rappe; Aaron M. Lindenberg

Absorption of light in hybrid perovskite solar cells leads to ultrafast large-amplitude deformations of the inorganic sublattice. 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.


Science Advances | 2017

Lead halide perovskites: Crystal-liquid duality, phonon glass electron crystals, and large polaron formation

Kiyoshi Miyata; Timothy L. Atallah; X.-Y. Zhu

Efficient dynamic screening is key to the success of lead halide perovskites in solar cells and light emitting devices. Lead halide perovskites have been demonstrated as high performance materials in solar cells and light-emitting devices. These materials are characterized by coherent band transport expected from crystalline semiconductors, but dielectric responses and phonon dynamics typical of liquids. This “crystal-liquid” duality implies that lead halide perovskites belong to phonon glass electron crystals, a class of materials believed to make the most efficient thermoelectrics. We show that the crystal-liquid duality and the resulting dielectric response are responsible for large polaron formation and screening of charge carriers, leading to defect tolerance, moderate charge carrier mobility, and radiative recombination properties. Large polaron formation, along with the phonon glass character, may also explain the marked reduction in hot carrier cooling rates in these materials.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Coherent singlet fission activated by symmetry breaking

Kiyoshi Miyata; Yuki Kurashige; Kazuya Watanabe; Toshiki Sugimoto; Shota Takahashi; Shunsuke Tanaka; Jun Takeya; Takeshi Yanai; Yoshiyasu Matsumoto

Singlet fission, in which a singlet exciton is converted to two triplet excitons, is a process that could be beneficial in photovoltaic applications. A full understanding of the dynamics of singlet fission in molecular systems requires detailed knowledge of the relevant potential energy surfaces and their (conical) intersections. However, obtaining such information is a nontrivial task, particularly for molecular aggregates. Here we investigate singlet fission in rubrene crystals using transient absorption spectroscopy and state-of-the-art quantum chemical calculations. We observe a coherent and ultrafast singlet-fission channel as well as the well-known and conventional thermally assisted incoherent channel. This coherent channel is accessible because the conical intersection for singlet fission on the excited-state potential energy surface is located very close to the equilibrium position of the ground-state potential energy surface and also because of the excitation of an intermolecular symmetry-breaking mode, which activates the electronic coupling necessary for singlet fission. Singlet fission — converting a singlet exciton to two triplet excitons — may be useful for improving photovoltaic efficiency. Ultrafast spectroscopic measurements and quantum chemical calculations have now uncovered aspects of the process critical to it occurring efficiently, including the role of intermolecular vibrations and symmetry breaking, and the location of a conical intersection on the excited-state potential-energy surface.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Quantifying Polaron Formation and Charge Carrier Cooling in Lead-Iodide Perovskites.

Simon A. Bretschneider; Ivan Ivanov; Hai I. Wang; Kiyoshi Miyata; X.-Y. Zhu; Mischa Bonn

Notwithstanding the success of lead-halide perovskites in emerging solar energy conversion technologies, many of the fundamental photophysical phenomena in this material remain debated. Here, the initial steps following photogeneration of free charge carriers in lead-iodide perovskites are studied, and timescales of charge carrier cooling and polaron formation, as a function of temperature and charge carrier excess energy, are quantified. It is found, using terahertz time-domain spectroscopy (THz-TDS), that the observed femtosecond rise in the photoconductivity can be described very well using a simple model of sequential charge carrier cooling and polaron formation. For excitation above the bandgap, the carrier cooling time depends on the charge carrier excess energy and lattice temperature, with cooling rates varying between 1 and 6 meV fs-1 , depending on the cation. While carrier cooling depends on the cation, polaron formation occurs within ≈400 fs in CH3 NH3 PbI3 (MAPbI3 ), CH(NH2 )2 PbI3 (FAPbI3 ), and CsPbI3 . Its formation time is independent of temperature between 160 and 295 K. The very similar polaron formation dynamics observed for the three perovskites points to the critical role of the inorganic lattice, rather than the cations, for polaron formation.


Nature Materials | 2018

Ferroelectric large polarons

Kiyoshi Miyata; X.-Y. Zhu

Kiyoshi Miyata and X.-Y. Zhu analyse the ferroelectric-like dielectric response of lead halide perovskites in the terahertz region and discuss the potential role of polar nanodomains in accounting for the defect tolerance and low recombination rates of these materials.

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