Origin of enhanced nonradiative carrier recombination induced by oxygen in hybrid Sn perovskite
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Liang, YuhangCui, Xiangyuan
Li, Feng
Stampfl, Catherine
Ringer, Simon Peter
Yang, Xudong
Rongkun, Zheng
Abstract
Oxygen ingression has been shown to substantially decrease the carrier lifetime of Sn-based perovskites, behind which the mechanism remains yet unknown. Our first-principles calculations reveal that in prototypical MASnI3 (MA = CH3NH3), oxygen by itself is not a recombination center. ...
See moreOxygen ingression has been shown to substantially decrease the carrier lifetime of Sn-based perovskites, behind which the mechanism remains yet unknown. Our first-principles calculations reveal that in prototypical MASnI3 (MA = CH3NH3), oxygen by itself is not a recombination center. Instead, it tends to form substitutional OI through combining with native I vacancies (VI) and remarkably increases the original recombination rate of VI by 2–3 orders of magnitude. This rationalizes the experimentally observed sharp decline of carrier lifetime in perovskites exposed to air. The significantly enhanced carrier recombination is due to a smaller electron capture barrier of OI, resulting from lattice strengthening and the suppressed structural relaxation upon electron capture. These insights offer a route to further improve device performance via anion engineering in broad Sn-based perovskite optoelectronics operating in ambient air. Moreover, our results highlight the important role of lattice relaxation for nonradiative carrier capture in materials in general.
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See moreOxygen ingression has been shown to substantially decrease the carrier lifetime of Sn-based perovskites, behind which the mechanism remains yet unknown. Our first-principles calculations reveal that in prototypical MASnI3 (MA = CH3NH3), oxygen by itself is not a recombination center. Instead, it tends to form substitutional OI through combining with native I vacancies (VI) and remarkably increases the original recombination rate of VI by 2–3 orders of magnitude. This rationalizes the experimentally observed sharp decline of carrier lifetime in perovskites exposed to air. The significantly enhanced carrier recombination is due to a smaller electron capture barrier of OI, resulting from lattice strengthening and the suppressed structural relaxation upon electron capture. These insights offer a route to further improve device performance via anion engineering in broad Sn-based perovskite optoelectronics operating in ambient air. Moreover, our results highlight the important role of lattice relaxation for nonradiative carrier capture in materials in general.
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Date
2023Source title
The Journal of Physical Chemistry LettersVolume
14Issue
12Publisher
ACS publicationsLicence
OtherFaculty/School
Faculty of Engineering, School of Chemical and Biomolecular EngineeringFaculty of Science, School of Physics
Faculty of Engineering, School of Aerospace Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering
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