Halide Perovskites—An emerging class of semiconductors

Engineering research seminar with Severin N. Habisreutinger, Staff Scientist, Chemistry & Nanoscience Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

April 19, 2021
3:30 pm - 4:30 pm
Location
Videoconference
Sponsored by
Thayer School of Engineering
Audience
Public
More information
Ashley Parker

ZOOM LINK
Meeting ID: 953 5527 5056          
Passcode: 904558

Halide perovskites are an exciting class of semiconductors that holds enormous promise for even cheaper and ubiquitous photovoltaics. These materials emerged merely a decade ago as an absorber in solar cells, but perovskite solar cell efficiencies already exceed most other thin-film technologies with lab efficiencies exceeding 25.5%. The underlying reason for the rapid rise of perovskite photovoltaics (PV) are the excellent semiconductor properties of halide perovskites despite being deposited via facile solution-based processing techniques—such as ink-jet printing. This means a future can be envisioned in which solar panels are printed like newspapers.

Beyond photovoltaics, halide perovskite semiconductors have also found use in photonic sources such as light-emitting diodes and lasers, and as wide-band detectors for example for X-rays. Aside from the outstanding conventional semiconductor characteristics, halide perovskites have additional unique properties such as wide tunability of their bandgap allowing for all-perovskite multijunction devices, and their radiation resistance making them particularly interesting for space applications.

Conversely, halide perovskites have some unique vulnerabilities including being partially water soluble, and containing highly reactive constituent materials. Therefore, it is critical to develop contact materials for devices which keep the perovskite contained and moisture out. Here, I will first discuss the use of composite materials based on single-walled carbon nanotubes as charge-selective contacts, why they work and how they can stabilize perovskite solar cells. Next, I will highlight the use of time-resolved microwave conductivity as a contactless characterization technique for elucidating the charge transfer between perovskites absorbers and charge-selective contacts, such as carbon nanotube networks. I will further discuss how this technique can be used to characterize the perovskite quality itself and determine important characteristics such as charge-carrier mobility or the trap density. Finally, I will explore the use of halide perovskites beyond PV, namely in neuromorphic computing where we have recently demonstrated that a junction between perovskite quantum dots and carbon nanotubes can act as a photonic synapse with energy consumption as low as biological systems.

The wide range of beneficial properties of halide perovskites make them attractive for a variety of applications, ranging from terrestrial and extraterrestrial largescale PV installations, to highly efficient light sources to new medical imaging devices. However, looking to the future many more optoelectronic uses are conceivable from artificial neural networks to complex photocatalytic systems to spintronics; while the research is still at its beginning, the future for halide perovskites is certainly bright.

Location
Videoconference
Sponsored by
Thayer School of Engineering
Audience
Public
More information
Ashley Parker