Perovskite-based thin-film solar cells today reach power conversion efficiencies of more than 22%. Methylammonium lead iodide (MAPI) is prototypical for this material class of hybrid halide perovskite semiconductors and at the focal point of interest for a growing community in research and engineering. Here, a detailed understanding of the charge carrier transport and its limitations by underlying scattering mechanisms is of great interest to the material’s optimization and development. In this article, we present an all-optical study of the charge carrier diffusion properties in large-crystal MAPI thin films in the tetragonal crystal phase from 170 K to room temperature. We probe the local material properties of individual crystal grains within a MAPI thin film and find a steady decrease of the charge carrier diffusion constant with increasing temperature. From the resulting charge carrier mobility, we find a power law dependence of μ ∝ T m with m = −(1.8 ± 0.1). We further study the temperature-dependent mobility of the orthorhombic crystal phase from 50 to 140 K and observe a distinctly different exponent of m = −(1.2 ± 0.1).
Two‐dimensional (2D) hybrid double perovskites are a promising emerging class of materials featuring superior intrinsic and extrinsic stability over their 3D parent structures, while enabling additional structural diversity and tunability. Here, we expand the Ag–Bi‐based double perovskite system, comparing structures obtained with the halides chloride, bromide, and iodide and the organic spacer cation 4‐fluorophenethylammonium (4FPEA) to form the n = 1 Ruddlesden–Popper (RP) phases (4FPEA)4AgBiX8 (X = Cl, Br, I). We demonstrate access to the iodide RP‐phase through a simple organic spacer, analyze the different properties as a result of halide substitution and incorporate the materials into photodetectors. Highly oriented thin films with very large domain sizes are fabricated and investigated with grazing incidence wide angle X‐ray scattering, revealing a strong dependence of morphology on substrate choice and synthesis parameters. First‐principles calculations confirm a direct band gap and show type Ib and IIb band alignment between organic and inorganic quantum wells. Optical characterization, temperature‐dependent photoluminescence, and optical‐pump terahertz‐probe spectroscopy give insights into the absorption and emissive behavior of the materials as well as their charge‐carrier dynamics. Overall, we further elucidate the possible reasons for the electronic and emissive properties of these intriguing materials, dominated by phonon‐coupled and defect‐mediated polaronic states.
In recent years, metal−organic frameworks (MOFs) with the structure MOF-74 have attracted much interest owing to their tunable pore aperture, high surface area, and electrical conductivity. The synthesis of well-defined, highly crystalline thin films of MOF-74 is of paramount importance for their implementation into device-based applications such as in chemical sensing, optoelectronics, gas storage, and separations. Here, we present the synthesis of highly crystalline MOF-74 (M = Zn 2+ , Mg 2+ , Ni 2+ , and Co 2+ ) films by vapor-assisted conversion. MOF-74(M) thin films were grown on bare glass, quartz, gold, and silicon surfaces, showing high crystallinity, crystal orientation, and average thicknesses of 500 nm. By including a benzoic acid modulator, oriented MOF-74(Zn) films, with the crystallographic c-axis of the MOF crystallites oriented horizontally to the surface, were obtained on all substrates. In addition, highly crystalline MOF-74(Mg) was grown on glass and gold substrates with the crystallographic c-axis aligned orthogonally to the surface. Moreover, randomly oriented highly crystalline MOF-74(Co) and MOF-74(Ni) films were synthesized on glass, quartz, gold, and silicon. The pore accessibility of the obtained films was examined by means of krypton sorption measurements, revealing permanent and accessible porosity, reaching a BET surface area of 975 cm 2 /cm 2 for MOF-74(Mg). Steadystate and time-resolved photoluminescence studies show emission in the blue spectral region of MOF-74(Zn and Mg) on quartz with a biexponential decay. In addition, confocal photoluminescence mapping confirmed a homogeneous MOF film surface with a similar emission profile over the whole examined area of 70 μm × 70 μm.
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