| Literature DB >> 32728239 |
Yusheng Lei1, Yimu Chen1, Ruiqi Zhang1, Yuheng Li1, Qizhang Yan1, Seunghyun Lee2, Yugang Yu3, Hsinhan Tsai4, Woojin Choi5, Kaiping Wang3, Yanqi Luo1, Yue Gu3, Xinran Zheng6, Chunfeng Wang7, Chonghe Wang1, Hongjie Hu1, Yang Li1, Baiyan Qi3, Muyang Lin1, Zhuorui Zhang1, Shadi A Dayeh1,3,5, Matt Pharr2, David P Fenning1, Yu-Hwa Lo3,5, Jian Luo1,3, Kesong Yang1, Jinkyoung Yoo4, Wanyi Nie4, Sheng Xu8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites have electronic and optoelectronic properties that make them appealing in many device applications1-4. Although many approaches focus on polycrystalline materials5-7, single-crystal hybrid perovskites show improved carrier transport and enhanced stability over their polycrystalline counterparts, due to their orientation-dependent transport behaviour8-10 and lower defect concentrations11,12. However, the fabrication of single-crystal hybrid perovskites, and controlling their morphology and composition, are challenging12. Here we report a solution-based lithography-assisted epitaxial-growth-and-transfer method for fabricating single-crystal hybrid perovskites on arbitrary substrates, with precise control of their thickness (from about 600 nanometres to about 100 micrometres), area (continuous thin films up to about 5.5 centimetres by 5.5 centimetres), and composition gradient in the thickness direction (for example, from methylammonium lead iodide, MAPbI3, to MAPb0.5Sn0.5I3). The transferred single-crystal hybrid perovskites are of comparable quality to those directly grown on epitaxial substrates, and are mechanically flexible depending on the thickness. Lead-tin gradient alloying allows the formation of a graded electronic bandgap, which increases the carrier mobility and impedes carrier recombination. Devices based on these single-crystal hybrid perovskites show not only high stability against various degradation factors but also good performance (for example, solar cells based on lead-tin-gradient structures with an average efficiency of 18.77 per cent).Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32728239 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2526-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962