Unveiling the impact of organic spacer cations on auger recombination in layered halide perovskites

A library of large organic cation spacers is available for engineering the performance of layered two-dimensional (2D) halide perovskite devices. Despite extensive photophysics studies, there remains a research gap over the structure-function relations in 2D perovskites, especially the underlying fa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Furuhashi, Tomoki, Kanwat, Anil, Ramesh, Sankaran, Mathews, Nripan, Sum, Tze Chien
Other Authors: School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171346
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:A library of large organic cation spacers is available for engineering the performance of layered two-dimensional (2D) halide perovskite devices. Despite extensive photophysics studies, there remains a research gap over the structure-function relations in 2D perovskites, especially the underlying factors influencing the Auger recombination (AR) process. Herein, the contributions of exciton binding energy, exciton-phonon coupling, and defects/film morphology to the AR process in 2D perovskites are examined. Phenyl-alkyl-ammonium cations with different lengths of attached alkyl groups, commonly used in blue light-emitting diodes, are investigated. The findings reveal an order of magnitude higher threshold carrier density for the AR onset as well as a reduced AR in cations with longer alkyl chain length. Although possessing similar exciton binding energies, the exciton-phonon coupling strength is found to play a major role in reducing the AR rate, with a smaller contribution from the defect states/film morphology. The findings can help provide further guidance on organic spacer cation engineering for highly efficient 2D perovskite light emitters.