APS Logo

The evolution of ultrafast carrier dynamics <i>in-situ</i> perovskite optoelectronic devices

POSTER

Abstract

Although significant progresses have been made toward to optoelectronics application including solar cells, large color gamut LEDs, photodetectors, and X-ray detectors, the fundamental understanding of ultrafast carrier dynamics of organic-inorganic perovskite materials remains unclear. The ultrafast dynamics, which reveals some novel physical phenomena such as hot carrier cooling, phonon bottle-neck effect, and many-body problem was widely studied by ultrafast optical spectroscopies, which include pump-probe transient absorption (transmission, reflection, time-resolved THz, optical Kerr effect, and the most popular time-resolved photoluminescence(TRPL). However, it remains a challenge to study the perovskite optoelectronic devices in-situ in an ultrafast fashion.
In this talk, we use an ultrafast photocurrent spectroscopy with sub-25 picosecond time resolution to reveal the evolution of ultrafast carrier dynamics from sub-25 ps to microsecond in-situ perovskite solar cells and photoconductors. We address the basic questions of carrier photogeneration, recombination, transport, trapping, in addition to directly extracting carrier mobility, lifetime, and the property of trap states such as density, energy level, and capture cross-section.

Presenters

  • Jianbo Gao

    PHYSICS, Clemson University, Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Physics & Astronomy, Clemson University

Authors

  • Kanishka Kobbekaduwa

    PHYSICS, Clemson University

  • Shreetu Shrestha

    LANL

  • Pan P Adhikari

    PHYSICS, Clemson University, Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Physics & Astronomy, Clemson University

  • Exian Liu

    PHYSICS, Clemson University, Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Physics & Astronomy, Clemson University

  • Wanyi Nie

    LANL, Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • Jianbo Gao

    PHYSICS, Clemson University, Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Physics & Astronomy, Clemson University