| Literature DB >> 30001099 |
Do Hyung Chun1, Young Jin Choi2, Yongjae In3, Jae Keun Nam1, Yung Ji Choi4, Sangeun Yun4, Wook Kim5, Dukhyun Choi5, Dongho Kim4, Hyunjung Shin3, Jeong Ho Cho2, Jong Hyeok Park1.
Abstract
Numerous studies have reported the use of halide perovskites as highly functional light-harvesting materials. The development of optimized compositions and deposition approaches has led to impressive improvements; however, no noticeable breakthrough in performance has been observed for these materials recently. Here, a breakthrough that enables the fabrication of vertically grown halide perovskite (VGHP) nanopillar photodetectors via a nanoimprinting crystallization technique is demonstrated. We used engraved nanopatterned polymer stamps to form VGHP nanopillars during the pressurized crystallization of the softly baked gel state of a methylammonium lead iodide (CH3NH3PbI3, denoted MAPI) film. The VGHP films exhibit much lower defect density and higher conductivity, as supported by current-voltage characteristic measurements and conductive atomic force microscopy measurements. Ultimately, two-terminal lateral photodetectors based on the VGHP nanopillar films show a greatly enhanced photoresponse compared with flat film-based photodetectors. We expect that the deposition method presented here will help surpass the technical limits and contribute to further improvements in various halide-perovskite-based devices.Entities:
Keywords: nanoimprinting; nanopattern; nanopillar; perovskite; photodetector
Year: 2018 PMID: 30001099 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b04170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881