The present work reports the application of RF-magnetron sputtering technique to realize CsPbBr 3 70 nm thick films on glass substrate by means of a one-step procedure. The obtained films show highly uniform surface morphology and homogeneous thickness as evidenced by AFM and SEM investigations. XRD measurements demonstrate the presence of two phases: a dominant orthorhombic CsPbBr 3 and a subordinate CsPb 2 Br 5 . Finally, XPS data reveals surface bromine depletion respect to the stoichiometrical CsPbBr 3 composition, nevertheless photoluminescence spectroscopy results confirm the formation of a highly luminescent film. These preliminary results demonstrate that our approach could be of great relevance for easy fabrication of large area perovskite thin films. Future developments, based on this approach, may include the realization of multijunction solar cells and multicolor light emitting devices.
The role of structural and dynamical disorder in semiconductors is a topic of fundamental relevance because of its contribution to the spectral line shape of the photoluminescence, and it plays a major role in ruling the carrier transport properties at the band edge. In this regard, a class of semiconductors, i.e., halide perovskites, deeply investigated in the last decade, shows a peculiar degree of disorder, which has only been recently under investigation. The interest to study disorder in halide perovskites is related to the large set of innovative applications of this class of materials, spanning from energy harvesting to high brilliance incoherent and coherent light emitters. In this perspective, we show that quantitative information on the disorder in halide perovskites can be extracted by deep analysis of the photoluminescence in different experimental conditions. Our study, conducted on a large set of samples of a metal halide perovskite, CsPbBr3, prepared with various synthesis/deposition methods, clarifies the relative weight of the static and dynamic contributions. A comparison with theoretical predictions is provided, gaining insights into the exciton/carrier–phonon interaction in metal halide perovskites.
By means of time-resolved photoluminescence (TR-PL) spectroscopy, we present a detailed investigation of the carrier relaxation dynamics in a CsPbBr3 bulk sample and microcrystal ensemble at cryogenic temperature on a picosecond time scale. We provide evidence of a long temperature-dependent cooling rate for the excitons and free carriers population, with an initial cooling time constant of a few tens of picoseconds. A relaxation bottleneck in the thermalization process was found that cannot be explained by the Auger effect or hot phonon population, since we address a very low excitation regime, not commonly investigated in literature, where such processes are not effective. Adding a continuous wave optical bias to the picosecond excitation, we probed the photoinduced PL decrease of the localized states and the photoinduced PL increase of the population in the high energy states. A long recovery time from the photoinduced PL decrease was found for localized states and quite significant differences were detected, depending on the resonance/off resonance bias used in the experiment.
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