| Literature DB >> 28569753 |
Liang Luo1,2, Long Men3,4, Zhaoyu Liu1,2, Yaroslav Mudryk1, Xin Zhao1,2, Yongxin Yao1,2, Joong M Park1,2, Ruth Shinar1, Joseph Shinar1,2, Kai-Ming Ho1,2, Ilias E Perakis5, Javier Vela3,4, Jigang Wang1,2.
Abstract
How photoexcitations evolve into Coulomb-bound electron and hole pairs, called excitons, and unbound charge carriers is a key cross-cutting issue in photovoltaics and optoelectronics. Until now, the initial quantum dynamics following photoexcitation remains elusive in the hybrid perovskite system. Here we reveal excitonic Rydberg states with distinct formation pathways by observing the multiple resonant, internal quantum transitions using ultrafast terahertz quasi-particle transport. Nonequilibrium emergent states evolve with a complex co-existence of excitons, carriers and phonons, where a delayed buildup of excitons under on- and off-resonant pumping conditions allows us to distinguish between the loss of electronic coherence and hot state cooling processes. The nearly ∼1 ps dephasing time, efficient electron scattering with discrete terahertz phonons and intermediate binding energy of ∼13.5 meV in perovskites are distinct from conventional photovoltaic semiconductors. In addition to providing implications for coherent energy conversion, these are potentially relevant to the development of light-harvesting and electron-transport devices.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28569753 PMCID: PMC5461501 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1THz conductivity measurement scheme and sample characterizations.
(a) Schematics of exciton dispersion near K≈0, with internal quantum transitions of 1s→2p and 1s→3p marked. Photoexcitation creates pair transitions in the perovskites that are resonantly probed by THz pulses. (b,c) SEM images of pure CH3NH3PbI3 powder and CH3NH3PbI3/PMMA film, respectively. (d) X-ray diffraction measurement of perovskite film and powder. (e) Absorption spectra of the perovskite/PMMA film at various temperatures. Shown together are the two pump spectra (#1 and #2, shade).
Figure 2The direct observation of excitonic Rydberg states in CH3NH3PbI3.
(a) THz fields transmitted (raw data) through a clear aperture (grey), the sample without pump (black) and its pump-induced change (red) under 790 nm wavelength and 550 μJ cm−2 fluence, at T=8 K and pump probe delay Δt=60 ps. There is negligible pump-induced change for pure PMMA (blue). (b,c) Ultrafast THz spectra Δσ1(ω) and Δɛ1(ω) under the same pumping conditions as (a) for various temperatures. This demonstrates the distinct resonant, internal quantum transitions, the 1s→2p and 1s→3p marked as A1 and A2, which are clearly different from the phonon bleachings in the CH3NH3PbI3 (B) and PMMA (P) (Supplementary Fig. 4 and Supplementary Note 4). Shown together are the complete (black lines) and partial (blue lines, without excitonic contribution) model calculations by equation (1). (d) A 3D view of the temperature-dependent Δσ1(ω) spectra further confirms the fine details of the phonon bleaching modes.
Figure 3Ultrafast THz Snapshots of formation pathways of excitonic Rydberg states.
(a) The THz response functions (red dots) measured under 790 nm wavelength and 550 μJ cm−2 fluence, at T=8 K and pump probe delay Δt=60 ps. The fit (black lines), based on the analytical model of equation (1), is the sum of 1s→2p (dashed red lines), 1s→3p (dashed green lines) and unbound e-h carriers (dashed blue lines). (b,c) Photoinduced conductivity changes Δσ1(ω) at several pump-probe delays and T=8 K after excitation at 790 nm (550 μJ cm−2 fluence) and 399 nm (120 μJ cm−2 fluence), respectively. The shaded circles are the effective transition strength , extracted from photoinduced internal quantum transitions of excitons. The pump fluences are chosen to induce approximately equivalent for both excitations which allows to underpin their distinctly different rise times.
Figure 4The time-evolution of the exciton distribution distinguishing various processes.
(a,b) Exciton population difference ΔN1 (red diamonds), ΔN1 (blue dots) as a function of time delay in a logarithmic scale at 8 K for 790 nm (550 μJ cm−2) and 399 nm (120 μJ cm−2) excitation, respectively. The detailed THz time scan with 50 fs resolution is shown together in a. The error bars of carrier densities indicate the uncertainty from theoretical fitting of the experimental results. (c) The time-dependent density N of unbound carriers for two pumping conditions. (d) Time-dependent ratios of the population difference ΔN1/ΔN1 are shown in the inset, which allows to extract the cooling curves for two pumping conditions. (e) The photoinduced THz transmission under 790 nm and 550 μJ cm−2 pumping for various temperatures. A two-step rise, ∼1.0±0.03 ps (grey) and ∼11.2±1.06 ps (cyan) is separated for the 8 K trace.