Halide perovskite (HaP) semiconductors are revolutionizing photovoltaic (PV) solar energy conversion by showing remarkable performance of solar cells made with HaPs, especially tetragonal methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPbI 3 ). In particular, the low voltage loss of these cells implies a remarkably low recombination rate of photogenerated carriers. It was suggested that low recombination can be due to the spatial separation of electrons and holes, a possibility if MAPbI 3 is a semiconducting ferroelectric, which, however, requires clear experimental evidence. As a first step, we show that, in operando, MAPbI 3 (unlike MAPbBr 3 ) is pyroelectric, which implies it can be ferroelectric. The next step, proving it is (not) ferroelectric, is challenging, because of the material's relatively high electrical conductance (a consequence of an optical band gap suitable for PV conversion) and low stability under high applied bias voltage. This excludes normal measurements of a ferroelectric hysteresis loop, to prove ferroelectricity's hallmark switchable polarization. By adopting an approach suitable for electrically leaky materials as MAPbI 3 , we show here ferroelectric hysteresis from well-characterized single crystals at low temperature (still within the tetragonal phase, which is stable at room temperature). By chemical etching, we also can image the structural fingerprint for ferroelectricity, polar domains, periodically stacked along the polar axis of the crystal, which, as predicted by theory, scale with the overall crystal size. We also succeeded in detecting clear second harmonic generation, direct evidence for the material's noncentrosymmetry. We note that the material's ferroelectric nature, can, but need not be important in a PV cell at room temperature.halide perovskites | photovoltaics | semiconductors | ferroelectricity | pyroelectricity N ew optoelectronic materials are of interest for producing solar cells with higher power and voltage efficiencies, lower costs, and improved long-term reliability. A very recent entry is the family of halide perovskites (HaPs), in particular those based on methylammonium (MA) lead iodide (MAPbI 3 ), MAPbBr 3 , and its inorganic analog CsPbBr 3 . Devices based on these perform remarkably well as solar cells (1, 2), as well as in other optoelectronic applications, such as LEDs and electromagnetic radiation detectors (3-5). Understanding possible unique characteristics of HaPs may show the way to other materials with similar key features.The ABX 3 (X = I, Br, Cl) HaP semiconductors (SCs), that is, with perovskite or perovskite-like structures, reach, via a steep absorption edge, a high optical absorption coefficient (∼10 5 cm −1 ) (6, 7), long charge carrier lifetimes (∼0.1-1 μs) (8), and reasonable carrier mobilities (less than or equal to ∼100 cm 2 ·V −1 ·s −1 ) (9), and have a low exciton binding energy (10). With these characteristics, the thickness of the optical absorber layer can be ≤0.5 μm, which allows the charge carriers (separated electrons and holes) to diffuse/d...
Although ice melts and water freezes under equilibrium conditions at 0 degrees C, water can be supercooled under homogeneous conditions in a clean environment down to -40 degrees C without freezing. The influence of the electric field on the freezing temperature of supercooled water (electrofreezing) is of topical importance in the living and inanimate worlds. We report that positively charged surfaces of pyroelectric LiTaO3 crystals and SrTiO3 thin films promote ice nucleation, whereas the same surfaces when negatively charged reduce the freezing temperature. Accordingly, droplets of water cooled down on a negatively charged LiTaO3 surface and remaining liquid at -11 degrees C freeze immediately when this surface is heated to -8 degrees C, as a result of the replacement of the negative surface charge by a positive one. Furthermore, powder x-ray diffraction studies demonstrated that the freezing on the positively charged surface starts at the solid/water interface, whereas on a negatively charged surface, ice nucleation starts at the air/water interface.
Halide perovskite-based solar cells still have limited reproducibility, stability, and incomplete understanding of how they work. We track electronic processes in [CH3NH3]PbI3(Cl) ("perovskite") films in vacuo, and in N2, air, and O2, using impedance spectroscopy (IS), contact potential difference, and surface photovoltage measurements, providing direct evidence for perovskite sensitivity to the ambient environment. Two major characteristics of the perovskite IS response change with ambient environment, viz. -1- appearance of negative capacitance in vacuo or post-vacuo N2 exposure, indicating for the first time an electrochemical process in the perovskite, and -2- orders of magnitude decrease in the film resistance upon transferring the film from O2-rich ambient atmosphere to vacuum. The same change in ambient conditions also results in a 0.5 V decrease in the material work function. We suggest that facile adsorption of oxygen onto the film dedopes it from n-type toward intrinsic. These effects influence any material characterization, i.e., results may be ambient-dependent due to changes in the material's electrical properties and electrochemical reactivity, which can also affect material stability.
Room-temperature, long-range (300 nm), chirality-induced spin-selective electron conduction is found in chiral metal–organic Cu(II) phenylalanine crystals, using magnetic conductive-probe atomic force microscopy. These crystals are found to be also weakly ferromagnetic and ferroelectric. Notably, the observed ferromagnetism is thermally activated, so that the crystals are antiferromagnetic at low temperatures and become ferromagnetic above ∼50 K. Electron paramagnetic resonance measurements and density functional theory calculations suggest that these unusual magnetic properties result from indirect exchange interaction of the Cu(II) ions through the chiral lattice.
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