Highly Mobile Excitons in Single Crystal Methylammonium Lead Tribromide Perovskite Microribbons
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Authors
Senger, Ramazan Tuğrul
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Green Open Access
Yes
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No
Abstract
Excitons are often given negative connotation in solar energy harvesting in part due to their presumed short diffusion lengths. We investigate exciton transport in single-crystal methylammonium lead tribromide (MAPbBr3) microribbons via spectrally, spatially, and temporally resolved photocurrent and photoluminescence measurements. Distinct peaks in the photocurrent spectra unambiguously confirm exciton formation and allow for accurate extraction of the low temperature exciton binding energy (39 meV). Photocurrent decays within a few μm at room temperature, while a gate-tunable long-range photocurrent component appears at lower temperatures (about 100 μm below 140 K). Carrier lifetimes of 1.2 μs or shorter exclude the possibility of the long decay length arising from slow trapped-carrier hopping. Free carrier diffusion is also an unlikely source of the highly nonlocal photocurrent, due to their small fraction at low temperatures. We attribute the long-distance transport to high-mobility excitons, which may open up new opportunities for novel exciton-based photovoltaic applications.
Description
Keywords
Perovskites, Excitons, Solar energy, Physical sciences, Affordable and Clean Energy, Chemical sciences, Chemical Sciences, Physical Sciences, 530, Macromolecular and Materials Chemistry
Fields of Science
02 engineering and technology, 0210 nano-technology, 01 natural sciences, 0104 chemical sciences
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Volume
13
Issue
16
Start Page
3698
End Page
3705
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Scopus : 2
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2
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2
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7171
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161
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