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Metal halide perovskite has attracted great interest as a promising optoelectronic device material due to its inherent excellent photoelectric properties. Currently, perovskites have made significant strides in enhancing their efficiency, yet their industrial advancement and multiscenario applications remain hampered by manufacturing technology. In this work, high-quality MAPbI single-crystal films were prepared through low spatial frequency laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) with a depth of 139 nm on the surface of ITO processed by femtosecond laser. Femtosecond laser processing revealed that the period of LIPSS decreases with the increase of laser fluence and increases with the increase of scanning speed. Meanwhile, the depth of LIPSS grows with increasing laser fluence and first ascends and then descends as scanning speed goes up. Ultrafast pump probe experiments revealed that the coulomb explosion dominated the interaction mechanism between the femtosecond laser and material at low laser fluence, while the phase explosion became the main mechanism at high laser fluence. The LIPSS with a depth of 139 nm was selected as the substrate to prepare MAPbI single-crystal films based on the spatially confined growth method as it greatly facilitates the light absorption rate of MAPbI single-crystal films by FDTD simulation. SEM, EDS, and XRD analyses proved that the MAPbI single-crystal films have excellent surface quality morphology and uniform element distribution. The average lifetime of an MAPbI single crystal obtained by time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy is about 24.05 ns, which indicates the low defect density and a long carrier lifetime in MAPbI single-crystal films. Transient absorption spectroscopy revealed that Auger recombination is the primary carrier recombination mode at high excitation fluence, which proposed a strong carrier band filling effect and energy structure with two conduction bands in MAPbI single-crystal films. The accumulated carriers promoted the excited-state absorption and slowed down the recombination, which is meaningful for the further application of MAPbI single-crystal films in optoelectronic devices.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.5c00471 | DOI Listing |
Phys Rev Lett
June 2025
St. Petersburg State University, Spin Optics Laboratory, 198504 St. Petersburg, Russia.
We report on the first observation of spin noise in a strongly birefringent semiconductor-halide perovskite single crystal MAPbI_{3}. The observed spin noise resonance is attributed to resident free holes in the bulk of the crystal with one of the longest spin dephasing times T_{2}=4 ns. The spin dynamics is found to be affected by the residual light absorption of the crystal providing renormalization of the Larmor frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem Lett
June 2025
Laser Micro/Nano Fabrication Laboratory, School of Mechanical Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing 100081, China.
Metal halide perovskite has attracted great interest as a promising optoelectronic device material due to its inherent excellent photoelectric properties. Currently, perovskites have made significant strides in enhancing their efficiency, yet their industrial advancement and multiscenario applications remain hampered by manufacturing technology. In this work, high-quality MAPbI single-crystal films were prepared through low spatial frequency laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) with a depth of 139 nm on the surface of ITO processed by femtosecond laser.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
August 2025
MIIT Key Laboratory for Low-Dimensional Quantum Structure and Devices, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, 100081, China.
The supersaturation degree of perovskite precursors is hardly controllable, usually leading to explosive nucleation, which is a great challenge for the solution growth of large-scale single crystals. In this work, a straightforward strategy is developed to simultaneously achieve precise nucleation control and significant growth acceleration of diverse perovskite single crystals through self-assembled propyl methacrylate-polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (PMA-POSS) microvesicles. The microvesicles encapsulate high concentrations of perovskite precursors and achieve localized release via thermal polymerization-induced rupture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Sci (Weinh)
July 2025
Technische Universität Dortmund, Experimentelle Physik 2, 44227, Dortmund, Germany.
Quantum technologic and spintronic applications require reliable semiconducting materials that enable a significant, long-living spin polarization of electronic excitations and offer the ability to manipulate it optically in an external field. Due to the specifics of band structure and remarkable spin-dependent properties, the lead halide perovskite semiconductors are suitable candidates for that. Here, the carrier spin dynamics in a MAPbI (MA = methylammonium) perovskite single crystal with thickness of 20 µm are studied by the time-resolved Kerr ellipticity technique at cryogenic temperatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
January 2025
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology Key Lab of Micro-Nano Optoelectronic Information System, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Semiconductor Optoelectronic Materials and Intelligent Photonic Systems, Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), Shenzhen, Guangdong 518055, China.
The power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of polycrystalline perovskite solar cells (PC-PSCs) have now reached a plateau after a decade of rapid development, leaving a distinct gap from their Shockley-Queisser limit. To continuously mitigate the PCE deficit, nonradiative carrier losses resulting from defects should be further optimized. Single-crystal perovskites are considered an ideal platform to study the efficiency limit of perovskite solar cells due to their intrinsically low defect density, as demonstrated in bulk single crystals.
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