| Literature DB >> 30368936 |
Gede W P Adhyaksa1, Sarah Brittman1, Haralds Āboliņš1, Andries Lof1, Xueying Li2, Joel D Keelor3, Yanqi Luo2, Teodor Duevski1, Ron M A Heeren3, Shane R Ellis3, David P Fenning2, Erik C Garnett1.
Abstract
Grain boundaries play a key role in the performance of thin-film optoelectronic devices and yet their effect in halide perovskite materials is still not understood. The biggest factor limiting progress is the inability to identify grain boundaries. Noncrystallographic techniques can misidentify grain boundaries, leading to conflicting literature reports about their influence; however, the gold standard - electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) - destroys halide perovskite thin films. Here, this problem is solved by using a solid-state EBSD detector with 6000 times higher sensitivity than the traditional phosphor screen and camera. Correlating true grain size with photoluminescence lifetime, carrier diffusion length, and mobility shows that grain boundaries are not benign but have a recombination velocity of 1670 cm s-1 , comparable to that of crystalline silicon. Amorphous grain boundaries are also observed that give rise to locally brighter photoluminescence intensity and longer lifetimes. This anomalous grain boundary character offers a possible explanation for the mysteriously long lifetime and record efficiency achieved in small grain halide perovskite thin films. It also suggests a new approach for passivating grain boundaries, independent of surface passivation, to lead to even better performance in optoelectronic devices.Entities:
Keywords: amorphous grain boundaries; carrier lifetime; diffusion length; electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD); grain size effect; halide perovskites; mobility
Year: 2018 PMID: 30368936 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201804792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849