Shallow defects and variable photoluminescence decay times up to 280 µs in triple-cation perovskites

Author:

Yuan YeORCID,Yan GenghuaORCID,Dreessen ChrisORCID,Rudolph Toby,Hülsbeck Markus,Klingebiel BenjaminORCID,Ye Jiajiu,Rau UweORCID,Kirchartz ThomasORCID

Abstract

AbstractQuantifying recombination in halide perovskites is a crucial prerequisite to control and improve the performance of perovskite-based solar cells. While both steady-state and transient photoluminescence are frequently used to assess recombination in perovskite absorbers, quantitative analyses within a consistent model are seldom reported. We use transient photoluminescence measurements with a large dynamic range of more than ten orders of magnitude on triple-cation perovskite films showing long-lived photoluminescence transients featuring continuously changing decay times that range from tens of nanoseconds to hundreds of microseconds. We quantitatively explain both the transient and steady-state photoluminescence with the presence of a high density of shallow defects and consequent high rates of charge carrier trapping, thereby showing that deep defects do not affect the recombination dynamics. The complex carrier kinetics caused by emission and recombination processes via shallow defects imply that the reporting of only single lifetime values, as is routinely done in the literature, is meaningless for such materials. We show that the features indicative for shallow defects seen in the bare films remain dominant in finished devices and are therefore also crucial to understanding the performance of perovskite solar cells.

Funder

Helmholtz Association

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

China and Germany Postdoctoral Exchange Program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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