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Portrait of Arkady Yartsev. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Arkady Yartsev

Researcher

Portrait of Arkady Yartsev. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Mechanistic insights into perovskite photoluminescence enhancement: light curing with oxygen can boost yield thousandfold

Author

  • Yuxi Tian
  • Maximilian Peter
  • Eva Unger
  • Mohamed Qenawy
  • Kaibo Zheng
  • Tönu Pullerits
  • Arkady Yartsev
  • Villy Sundström
  • Ivan Scheblykin

Summary, in English

A light-induced photoluminescence (PL) enhancement in surface-deposited methylammonium lead iodide (CH3NH3PbI3) perovskites was investigated in detail using time-resolved luminescence microscopy. We found the PL intensity to increase up to three orders of magnitude upon light illumination with an excitation power density of 0.01-1 W cm(-2). The PL enhancement is accompanied by an increase of the PL lifetime from several nanoseconds to several hundred nanoseconds and also by an increase of the initial amplitude of the PL decay. The latter suggests excited state quenching at the subpicosecond timescale. We propose a model where the trapping sites responsible for non-radiative charge recombination can be de-activated by a photochemical reaction involving oxygen. The reaction zone is spatially limited by the excitation light-penetration depth and diffusion length of the charge carriers. The latter increases in the course of the light-curing process making the reaction zone spreading from the surface towards the interior of the crystal. The PL enhancement can be reversed by switching on/off the excitation light or switching the atmosphere between oxygen and nitrogen. Slow diffusion of the reactants and products and equilibrium between the active and "cured" trapping sites are proposed to be the reasons for peculiar responses of PL to such varied experimental conditions.

Department/s

  • Chemical Physics
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

24978-24987

Publication/Series

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Volume

17

Issue

38

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Topic

  • Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics
  • Physical Chemistry

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1463-9084