4.6 Article

Influence of the substrate on the bulk properties of hybrid lead halide perovskite films

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 4, Issue 46, Pages 18153-18163

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6ta08695k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) [MAT2015-65356-C3-1-R, 2-R, MAT2014-54852-R, MAT2015-70611-ERC]
  2. Comunidad de Madrid Excellence Network [S2013/MIT-2740]
  3. Associated Lab LABCADIO [351]
  4. MINECO
  5. National Council of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq), Brazil, through the Science without Borders program

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In addition to the known effect of the substrate on the interfacial properties of perovskite films, here we show that the bulk properties of hybrid lead halide perovskite films depend on the type of substrate used for film growth. Despite the relative large film thickness, similar to 600 nm, the roughness and nature of the substrate layer (glass, FTO, TiO2 and PEDOT:PSS) affect not just the degree of preferential orientation and crystal grain size but also the lattice parameters of CH3NH3PbI3 films synthesized from the PbCl2 precursor. The obtained changes in lattice parameters indicate that the Pb-Pb distance varies by around 0.7%. We suggest that the substrate roughness and chemical nature determine the concentration of defects mainly by varying the chlorine content and probably by the incorporation of oxygen and iodine vacancies during film nucleation and growth. These differences also have consequences in the observed light induced transformations. Upon laser illumination, the formation of additional defects, most probably related to oxygen, is revealed by 110 and 165 cm(-1) Raman peaks. With increasing laser power the chemical transformation into PbOx is clearly identified by the 140 and 275 cm(-1) Raman peaks. The irreversible photoluminescence enhancement observed at low power with illumination time, also dependent on the substrate nature, is proposed to be due to the localization of the electron-hole excitons created in the vicinity of the light generated defects. These results shed light on the performance of the perovskite layer and help to understand how bulk processes, where ion migration is a conspicuous example, are severely affected by interfacial properties such as those imposed by the substrate.

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