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Evidence for Increased Exciton Binding Energy at High Temperature in 2D Ruddlesden-Popper Lead Halide Perovskites

ORAL

Abstract

Cryogenic measurements of exciton binding energies are extremely common and, in the usual circumstances, are good analogs for a material’s room-temperature behavior. When studying the role of excitons in materials integrated into room-temperature devices like solar cells, it occasionally happens that the behavior observed in situ does not correspond to those cryogenic measurements. Such is the case in materials like methylammonium lead iodide, where the exciton[JK1] binding energy decreases with increasing temperature. In the least convenient case, a potential solar cell material will have a higher exciton binding energy than expected, impeding free carrier generation and requiring additional exciton dissociation mechanisms. Using temperature-dependent measurements of the excitonic diamagnetic shift coefficient conducted using the Rice Advanced Magnet with Broadband Optics (RAMBO) in pulsed magnetic fields up to 45 T, we present data for a methylammonium lead iodide-based Ruddlesden-Popper 2D perovskite. Our results provide evidence for a room-temperature exciton binding energy exceeding previous cryogenic measurements.

Presenters

  • William Avery Smith

    Rice University

Authors

  • William Avery Smith

    Rice University

  • Fumiya Katsutani

    Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice University

  • Jin Hou

    Rice University, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University

  • Hao Zhang

    Rice Univ

  • Jean-Christophe Blancon

    Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University

  • Hiroyuki Nojiri

    Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University

  • Aditya D Mohite

    Rice University, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Rice University

  • Andrey Baydin

    Rice University

  • Junichiro Kono

    Rice University

  • Hanyu Zhu

    Rice University