Recent Progress on Perovskite Surfaces and Interfaces in Optoelectronic Devices.

Adv Mater

Dr. D. Luo, Prof. H. Yu, Prof. Z.-H. Lu, School of Microelectronics, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, Guangdong, 518055, China.

Published: July 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Surfaces and interfaces in perovskite semiconductors significantly influence charge-carrier dynamics, which are essential for improving optoelectronic devices like solar cells and LEDs.
  • The report highlights various defects on common perovskite surfaces that create deep-level charge-carrier traps, negatively impacting device performance by disrupting band alignment.
  • Strategies to enhance surface and interface quality include using specific buffer layers, surface passivation, catalysts for microstructure improvements, and optimal heterojunction designs to reduce defects and optimize device efficiency.

Article Abstract

Surfaces and heterojunction interfaces, where defects and energy levels dictate charge-carrier dynamics in optoelectronic devices, are critical for unlocking the full potential of perovskite semiconductors. In this progress report, chemical structures of perovskite surfaces are discussed and basic physical rules for the band alignment are summarized at various perovskite interfaces. Common perovskite surfaces are typically decorated by various compositional and structural defects such as residual surface reactants, discrete nanoclusters, reactions by products, vacancies, interstitials, antisites, etc. Some of these surface species induce deep-level defect states in the forbidden band forming very harmful charge-carrier traps and affect negatively the interface band alignments for achieving optimal device performance. Herein, an overview of research progresses on surface and interface engineering is provided to minimize deep-level defect states. The reviewed subjects include selection of interface and substrate buffer layers for growing better crystals, materials and processing methods for surface passivation, the surface catalyst for microstructure transformations, organic semiconductors for charge extraction or injection, heterojunctions with wide bandgap perovskites or nanocrystals for mitigating defects, and electrode interlayer for preventing interdiffusion and reactions. These surface and interface engineering strategies are shown to be critical in boosting device performance for both solar cells and light-emitting diodes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202006004DOI Listing

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