Applying time-resolved electroabsorption spectroscopy for the first time to methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite (MAPbI3) thin films under reverse bias, we monitored optically the ultrafast evolution of the local counter-electric field produced by the drift of photogenerated electrons and holes in opposite directions. Under an externally applied electric field of |E| < 10^5 V cm–1, the carriers were found to reach a separation of 40 nm within ∼1 ps. This distance corresponds to the average dimensions of crystalline grains in the active film, at the boundaries of which charges were trapped. An intragrain average carrier drift mobility of μ± = 23 cm^2 V–1 s–1 was inferred. Subsequent charge detrapping, migration through the entire film, and accumulation at its insulated surfaces caused a blue shift of the perovskite absorption edge that arose within tens of picoseconds, owing to a trap-limited electron drift mobility μn = 6 cm^2 V–1 s–1. Charge recombination was entirely suppressed between field-separated photocarriers generated at initial densities of n0 ≤ 2 × 10^16 cm–3. Accumulation of electrons at the interface between a mesoporous TiO2 electron-transport layer and a multigrain MAPbI3 film was also observed, which was indicative of delayed charge injection through a poor contact junction.
David Lyndon Emsley, Ümmügülsüm Günes, Michael Allan Hope, Manuel Cordova, Aditya Mishra
Paul Joseph Dyson, Ursula Röthlisberger, Felix Thomas Eickemeyer, Lukas Pfeifer, Virginia Carnevali, Nikolaos Lempesis, Lorenzo Agosta, Masaud Hassan S Almalki, Haizhou Lu, Yeonju Kim, Jaeki Jeong
Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin, Yong Ding, Bin Ding, Cheng Liu, Jian Xu