Screening in crystalline liquids protects energetic carriers in hybrid perovskites

ORAL

Abstract

Hybrid lead halide perovskites exhibit carrier properties that resemble those of pristine nonpolar semiconductors despite static and dynamic disorder, but how carriers are protected from efficient scattering with charged defects and optical phonons is unknown. Here, we reveal the carrier protection mechanism by comparing three single-crystal lead bromide perovskites: CH$_{3}$NH$_{3}$PbBr$_{3}$, CH(NH$_{2}$)$_{2}$PbBr$_{3}$, and CsPbBr$_{3}$. We observed hot fluorescence emission from energetic carriers with $\sim$ 10$^{2}$ picosecond lifetimes in CH$_{3}$NH$_{3}$PbBr$_{3}$ or CH(NH$_{2}$)$_{2}$PbBr$_{3}$, but not in CsPbBr$_{3}$. The hot fluorescence is correlated with liquid-like molecular reorientational motions, suggesting that dynamic screening protects energetic carriers via solvation or large polaron formation on time scales competitive with that of ultrafast cooling. Similar protections likely exist for band-edge carriers. The long-lived energetic carriers may enable hot-carrier solar cells with efficiencies exceeding the Shockley-Queisser limit. (Science 2016, 353, 1409.)

Authors

  • Haiming Zhu

    Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • Kiyoshi Miyata

    Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • Yongping Fu

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Jue Wang

    Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • Prakriti Joshi

    Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, Columbia University

  • Daniel Niesner

    Columbia University

  • Kristopher Williams

    Columbia University

  • Song Jin

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Xiaoyang Zhu

    Columbia University, Department of Chemistry, Columbia University