In
hybrid perovskite materials like CH
3
NH
3
PbI
3
, methylammonium (MA) lead iodide (MAPI), the orientation
of the MA
+
cations and their ordering can significantly
affect the structure of the inorganic framework. Although the states
near the band edges are known to be primarily derived from the Pb
and halogen orbitals rather than from the organic ion, the latter
may have an indirect effect through their impact on the structural
relaxation. In this work, we investigate both the structural relaxation
effects of the inorganic framework in response to the MA
+
orientation and their impact on the electronic structure near the
band edges. Calculations are performed for MA(Pb,Sn)
X
3
with (
X
= I, Br, and Cl) materials
for both Pb- and Sn-based compounds. The work focuses on the high-temperature
α-phase, which is nominally cubic if averaged over all possible
MA orientations and in which no alternating rotations of the octahedral
occur, so that the unit cell is the smallest possible. The effects
of van der Waals (vdW) corrections to density functional theory on
the structural relaxation are investigated. Our results reveal that
the vdW interactions between the MA
+
cation and the inorganic
framework can strongly affect the optimized orientation and position
of the molecule and the resulting distortion of the inorganic framework.
Consequently, it also affects the electronic properties of the materials
and specifically can change the band structure from direct to indirect
band gaps. The robustness of this result is studied by comparing hybrid
functional calculations and quasiparticle self-consistent GW calculations
as well as spin–orbit coupling.
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