Perovskite (PVK) films deposited directly on n-type crystalline
Si substrates were investigated by two operating modes of the surface
photovoltage (SPV) method: (i) the metal–insulator–semiconductor
(MIS) mode and (ii) the Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM). By scanning
from 900 to 600 nm in the MIS mode, we consecutively studied the relatively
fast processes of carrier generation, transport, and recombination
first in Si, then on both sides of the PVK/Si interface, and finally
in the PVK layer and its surface. The PVK optical absorption edge
was observed in the range of 1.61–1.65 eV in good agreement
with the band gap of 1.63 eV found from photoluminescence spectra.
Both SPV methods evidenced an upward energy band bending at the PVK/n-Si
interface generating positive SPV. Drift–diffusion modeling
allowed us to analyze the shape of the wavelength dependence of the
SPV. It was also observed that the intense illumination in the KPFM
measurements induces slow SPV transients which were explained by the
creation and migration of negative ions and their trapping at the
PVK surface. Finally, aging effects were studied by measuring again
SPV spectra after one-year storage in air, and an increase in the
concentration of shallow defect states at the PVK/n-Si interface was
found.