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The Dominant Energy Transport Pathway in Halide Perovskites: Photon Recycling or Carrier Diffusion?

The Dominant Energy Transport Pathway in Halide Perovskites: Photon Recycling or Carrier Diffusion? Photon recycling and carrier diffusion are the two plausible processes that primarily affect the carrier dynamics in halide perovskites, and therefore the evaluation of the performance of their photovoltaic and photonic devices. However, it is still challenging to isolate their individual contributions because both processes result in a similar emission redshift. Herein, it is confirmed that photon recycling is the dominant effect responsible for the observed redshifted emission. By applying one‐ and two‐photon confocal emission microscopy on Ruddlesden–Popper type 2D perovskites, of which interplane carrier diffusion is strictly suppressed, the substantial PL redshift (72 meV) is well reproduced by the photon transport model. A comparison of 3D bulk CH3NH3PbBr3 single crystal to 2D perovskite by depth‐resolved two‐photon PL spectra reveals the contribution of carrier diffusion on energy transport at a distance beyond diffusion length is constantly negligible, though the carrier diffusion indeed exists in the 3D crystal. The investigation resolves the fundamental confusion and debate surrounding the issue and provides significant insights into carrier kinetics in perovskites, which is important for future developments in solar cells and other optoelectronic devices. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Advanced Energy Materials Wiley

The Dominant Energy Transport Pathway in Halide Perovskites: Photon Recycling or Carrier Diffusion?

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References (78)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
"© 2019 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim"
ISSN
1614-6832
eISSN
1614-6840
DOI
10.1002/aenm.201900185
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Photon recycling and carrier diffusion are the two plausible processes that primarily affect the carrier dynamics in halide perovskites, and therefore the evaluation of the performance of their photovoltaic and photonic devices. However, it is still challenging to isolate their individual contributions because both processes result in a similar emission redshift. Herein, it is confirmed that photon recycling is the dominant effect responsible for the observed redshifted emission. By applying one‐ and two‐photon confocal emission microscopy on Ruddlesden–Popper type 2D perovskites, of which interplane carrier diffusion is strictly suppressed, the substantial PL redshift (72 meV) is well reproduced by the photon transport model. A comparison of 3D bulk CH3NH3PbBr3 single crystal to 2D perovskite by depth‐resolved two‐photon PL spectra reveals the contribution of carrier diffusion on energy transport at a distance beyond diffusion length is constantly negligible, though the carrier diffusion indeed exists in the 3D crystal. The investigation resolves the fundamental confusion and debate surrounding the issue and provides significant insights into carrier kinetics in perovskites, which is important for future developments in solar cells and other optoelectronic devices.

Journal

Advanced Energy MaterialsWiley

Published: May 1, 2019

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