
Arkady Yartsev
Researcher

Ultrafast Dynamics of Hole Injection and Recombination in Organometal Halide Perovskite Using Nickel Oxide as p-Type Contact Electrode.
Author
Summary, in English
There is a mounting effort to use nickel oxide (NiO) as p-type selective electrode for organometal halide perovskite-based solar cells. Recently, an overall power conversion efficiency using this hole acceptor has reached 18%. However, ultrafast spectroscopic investigations on the mechanism of charge injection as well as recombination dynamics have yet to be studied and understood. Using time-resolved terahertz spectroscopy, we show that hole transfer is complete on the subpicosecond time scale, driven by the favorable band alignment between the valence bands of perovskite and NiO nanoparticles (NiO(np)). Recombination time between holes injected into NiO(np) and mobile electrons in the perovskite material is shown to be hundreds of picoseconds to a few nanoseconds. Because of the low conductivity of NiO(np), holes are pinned at the interface, and it is electrons that determine the recombination rate. This recombination competes with charge collection and therefore must be minimized. Doping NiO to promote higher mobility of holes is desirable in order to prevent back recombination.
Department/s
- Chemical Physics
Publishing year
2016
Language
English
Pages
1096-1101
Publication/Series
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
Volume
7
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
Topic
- Physical Chemistry
- Condensed Matter Physics
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1948-7185