Carrier Transport In Hybrid Lead Halide Perovskites Studied By Ultrafast Pump-Probe Microscopy

Jordan M Snaider, Purdue University

Abstract

Insight into the nanoscale carrier transport in the rapidly developing class of solutionprocessed semiconductors known as metal halide perovskites is the focal point for these studies. Further advancement in fundamentally understanding photophysical processes associated with charge carrier transport is needed to realize the true potential of perovskites for photovoltaic applications. In this work, we study photogenerated carrier transport to understand the underlying transport behavior of the material on the 10s to 100s nanometer lengthscales. To study these processes, we employ a temporally-resolved and spatially-resolved technique, known as transient absorption microscopy, to elucidate the charge carrier dynamics and propagation associated with metal halide perovskites. This technique provides a simultaneous high temporal resolution (200 fs) and spatial resolution (50 nm) to allow for direct visualization of charge carrier migration on the nanometer length scale. There are many obstacles these carriers encounter between photogeneration and charge collection such as morphological effects (grain boundaries) and carrier interactions (scattering processes). We investigate carrier transport on the nanoscale to understand how morphological effects influence the materials transport behavior. Morphological defects such as voids and grain boundaries are inherently small and traditionally difficult to study directly. Further, because carrier cooling takes place on an ultrafast time scale (fs to ps), the combined spatial and temporal resolution is necessary for direct probing of hot (non-equilibrium) carrier transport. Here we investigate a variety of ways to enhance carrier transport lengthscales by studying how non-equilibrium carriers propagate throughout the material, as well as, carrier cooling mechanisms to extend the non-equilibrium regime. For optoelectronic devices based on polycrystalline semiconducting thin films, grain boundaries are important to consider since solution-based processing results in the formation of well-defined grains. In Chapter 3, we investigate equilibrium carrier transport in metal halide perovskite thin films that are created via the highly desired solution processing method. Carrier transport across grain boundaries is an important process in defining efficiency due to the literary discrepancies on whether the grains limit carrier transport or not. In this work, we employ transient absorption microscopy to directly measure carrier transport within and across the boundaries. By selectively imaging sub-bandgap states, our results show that lateral carrier transport is slowed down by these states at the grain boundaries. However, the long carrier lifetimes allow for efficient transport across the grain boundaries. The carrier diffusion constant is reduced by about a factor of 2 for micron-sized grain samples by the grain boundaries. For grain sizes on the order of ∼200 nm, carrier transport over multiple grains has been observed within a time window of 5 ns. These observations explain both the shortened photoluminescence lifetimes at the boundaries as well as the seemingly benign nature of the grain boundaries in carrier generation. The results of this work provide insight into why this defect tolerant material performs so well. Photovoltaic performance (power conversion efficiency) is governed by the ShockleyQueisser limit which can be overcame if hot carriers can be harvested before they thermalize. To convert sunlight to usable electricity, the photogenerated charge carriers need to migrate long distances and or live long enough to be collected. It is unclear whether these hot carriers can migrate a long enough distance for efficient collection.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Huang, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Alternative Energy|Analytical chemistry|Chemistry|Condensed matter physics|Energy|Optics|Physics

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