1 research outputs found
Persistent Energetic Electrons in Methylammonium Lead Iodide Perovskite Thin Films
In conventional semiconductor solar
cells, carriers are extracted
at the band edges and the excess electronic energy (<i>E*</i>) is lost as heat. If <i>E</i>* is harvested, power conversion
efficiency can be as high as twice the Shockley–Queisser limit.
To date, materials suitable for hot carrier solar cells have not been
found due to efficient electron/optical-phonon scattering in most
semiconductors, but our recent experiments revealed long-lived hot
carriers in single-crystal hybrid lead bromide perovskites. Here we
turn to polycrystalline methylammonium lead iodide perovskite, which
has emerged as the material for highly efficient solar cells. We observe
energetic electrons with excess energy ⟨<i>E*</i>⟩ ≈ 0.25 eV above the conduction band minimum and with
lifetime as long as ∼100 ps, which is 2–3 orders of
magnitude longer than those in conventional semiconductors. The energetic
carriers also give rise to hot fluorescence emission with pseudo-electronic
temperatures as high as 1900 K. These findings point to a suppression
of hot carrier scattering with optical phonons in methylammonium lead
iodide perovskite. We address mechanistic origins of this suppression
and, in particular, the correlation of this suppression with dynamic
disorder. We discuss potential harvesting of energetic carriers for
solar energy conversion