4.6 Article

Deep levels in cesium lead bromide from native defects and hydrogen

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages 7491-7495

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ta11742k

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Funding

  1. Naval Research Laboratory Postdoctoral Fellowship through the American Society for Engineering Education
  2. ONR/NRL 6.1 Base Research Program

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The study indicates the existence of deep-level defects in lead halide perovskites, contradicting the shallow defect hypothesis. Therefore, measures need to be taken to reduce deep-level recombination rates to improve the efficiency of the material.
Lead halide perovskites such as CsPbBr3 have achieved widespread attention as optoelectronic materials, due in large part to their good performance despite significant defect densities. This defect tolerance has often been explained by hypothesizing that there is negligible trap-assisted non-radiative recombination in these materials because none of the dominant defects give rise to deep levels in the gap. We refer to this as the shallow defect hypothesis. In this work, we reject the shallow defect hypothesis for CsPbBr3. Via a thorough first-principles inventory of native defects and hydrogen impurities, we show that a number of relevant defects do in fact have deep levels, most notably the bromine interstitial and hydrogen interstitial. This adds to a growing body of evidence against the shallow defect hypothesis, suggesting that the observed defect tolerance may be due instead to relatively low recombination rates at deep levels. Guided by the theoretical identification of these defects, experiments can take steps to mitigate trap-assisted non-radiative recombination, further boosting the efficiency of lead halide perovskite optoelectronics.

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