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Nanoscale charge accumulation and its effect on carrier dynamics in tri-cation perovskite structures

Published 11 Jun 2020 in physics.app-ph and cond-mat.mtrl-sci | (2006.06229v1)

Abstract: Nanoscale investigations by scanning probe microscopy have provided major contributions to the rapid development of organic-inorganic halide perovskites (OIHP) as optoelectronic devices. Further improvement of device level properties requires a deeper understanding of the performance-limiting mechanisms such as ion migration, phase segregation and their effects on charge extraction both at the nano- and macroscale. Here, we have studied the dynamic electrical response of Cs0.05(FA0.83-MA0.17)0.95PbI3-xBrx perovskite structures by employing conventional and microsecond time-resolved Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM). Our results indicate strong negative charge carrier trapping upon illumination and very slow (>1s) relaxation of charges at the grain boundaries. The fast electronic recombination and transport dynamics on the microsecond scale probed by time-resolved KPFM show diffusion of charge carriers towards grain boundaries and indicate locally higher recombination rates due to intrinsic spatial heterogeneity. The nanoscale electrostatic effects revealed are summarized in a collective model for mixed-halide CsFAMA. Results on multilayer solar cell structures draw direct relations between nanoscale ionic transport, electron accumulation, recombination properties and the final device performance. Our findings extend the current understanding of complex charge carrier dynamics in stable multi-cation OIHP structures.

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