| Literature DB >> 28514138 |
Mingming Chen1,2, Xin Shan1, Thomas Geske1,3, Junqiang Li1, Zhibin Yu1,3.
Abstract
Ion migration has been commonly observed as a detrimental phenomenon in organometal halide perovskite semiconductors, causing the measurement hysteresis in solar cells and ultrashort operation lifetimes in light-emitting diodes. In this work, ion migration is utilized for the formation of a p-i-n junction at ambient temperature in single-crystalline organometal halide perovskites. The junction is subsequently stabilized by quenching the ionic movement at a low temperature. Such a strategy of manipulating the ion migration has led to efficient single-crystalline light-emitting diodes that emit 2.3 eV photons starting at 1.8 V and sustain a continuous operation for 54 h at ∼5000 cd m-2 without degradation of brightness. In addition, a whispering-gallery-mode cavity and exciton-exciton interaction in the perovskite microplatelets have both been observed that can be potentially useful for achieving electrically driven laser diodes based on single-crystalline organometal halide perovskite semiconductors.Entities:
Keywords: halide perovskites; ion migration; laser; light-emitting diodes; microplatelets; single crystal
Year: 2017 PMID: 28514138 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b02629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881