| Literature DB >> 31915395 |
Yimu Chen1, Yusheng Lei1, Yuheng Li1, Yugang Yu2, Jinze Cai2, Ming-Hui Chiu3, Rahul Rao4, Yue Gu2, Chunfeng Wang1, Woojin Choi5, Hongjie Hu2, Chonghe Wang1, Yang Li1, Jiawei Song2, Jingxin Zhang2, Baiyan Qi2, Muyang Lin1, Zhuorui Zhang1, Ahmad E Islam4, Benji Maruyama4, Shadi Dayeh1,2,5, Lain-Jong Li3,6, Kesong Yang1, Yu-Hwa Lo2,5, Sheng Xu7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Strain engineering is a powerful tool with which to enhance semiconductor device performance1,2. Halide perovskites have shown great promise in device applications owing to their remarkable electronic and optoelectronic properties3-5. Although applying strain to halide perovskites has been frequently attempted, including using hydrostatic pressurization6-8, electrostriction9, annealing10-12, van der Waals force13, thermal expansion mismatch14, and heat-induced substrate phase transition15, the controllable and device-compatible strain engineering of halide perovskites by chemical epitaxy remains a challenge, owing to the absence of suitable lattice-mismatched epitaxial substrates. Here we report the strained epitaxial growth of halide perovskite single-crystal thin films on lattice-mismatched halide perovskite substrates. We investigated strain engineering of α-formamidinium lead iodide (α-FAPbI3) using both experimental techniques and theoretical calculations. By tailoring the substrate composition-and therefore its lattice parameter-a compressive strain as high as 2.4 per cent is applied to the epitaxial α-FAPbI3 thin film. We demonstrate that this strain effectively changes the crystal structure, reduces the bandgap and increases the hole mobility of α-FAPbI3. Strained epitaxy is also shown to have a substantial stabilization effect on the α-FAPbI3 phase owing to the synergistic effects of epitaxial stabilization and strain neutralization. As an example, strain engineering is applied to enhance the performance of an α-FAPbI3-based photodetector.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31915395 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1868-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962