Abstract

Atomistic characterization of surface termination and the corresponding mechanical properties of single-crystal methylammonium lead tribromide (MAPbBr3) are performed using combined atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. A clean MAPbBr3 surface is obtained by in situ cleavage in ultrahigh vacuum at room temperature, and the subsequent AFM measurements of the as-cleaved MAPbBr3 exhibit the coexistence of two different surface terrace types with step height differences corresponding to about half the thickness of a PbI6 octahedron layer. Concurrent friction force microscopy measurements show that the two surfaces result in two distinct friction values. Based on DFT calculations, we attribute the higher-friction and lower-friction surfaces to MABr-terminated flat and PbBr2-terminated vacant surface terminations, respectively. The calculated electronic band structures of the various MABr- and PbBr2-terminated surfaces show that the midgap states are absent, revealing the defect-tolerant nature of the ideal single-crystal MAPbBr3 surfaces.

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