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Ultrahigh sensitivity of methylammonium lead tribromide perovskite single crystals to environmental gases
Author(s) -
HongHua Fang,
Sampson Adjokatse,
Haotong Wei,
Jie Yang,
Graeme R. Blake,
Jinsong Huang,
Jacky Even,
Maria Antonietta Loi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1600534
Subject(s) - perovskite (structure) , tribromide , materials science , photoluminescence , single crystal , optoelectronics , photovoltaics , nanotechnology , crystal (programming language) , carrier lifetime , chemical physics , chemistry , inorganic chemistry , silicon , crystallography , ecology , computer science , programming language , photovoltaic system , biology
International audienceOne of the limiting factors to high device performance in photovoltaics is the presence of surface traps. Hence, the understanding and control of carrier recombination at the surface of organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite is critical for the design and optimization of devices with this material as the active layer. We demonstrate that the surface recombination rate (or surface trap state density) in methylammonium lead tribromide (MAPbBr3) single crystals can be fully and reversibly controlled by the physisorption of oxygen and water molecules, leading to a modulation of the photoluminescence intensity by over two orders of magnitude. We report an unusually low surface recombination velocity of 4 cm/s (corresponding to a surface trap state density of 108 cm−2) in this material, which is the lowest value ever reported for hybrid perovskites. In addition, a consistent modulation of the transport properties in single crystal devices is evidenced. Our findings highlight the importance of environmental conditions on the investigation and fabrication of high-quality, perovskite-based devices and offer a new potential application of these materials to detect oxygen and water vapor

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