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Auteurs principaux: Hou, Jin, Fletcher, Jared, Hall, Siedah J., Zhang, Hao, Zacharias, Marios, Volonakis, George, Welton, Claire, Mandani, Faiz, Metcalf, Isaac, Sun, Shuo, Zhang, Bo, Guo, Yinsheng, Reddy, G. N. Manjunatha, Katan, Claudine, Even, Jacky, Sfeir, Matthew Y., Kanatzidis, Mercouri G., Mohite, Aditya D.
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08121
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author Hou, Jin
Fletcher, Jared
Hall, Siedah J.
Zhang, Hao
Zacharias, Marios
Volonakis, George
Welton, Claire
Mandani, Faiz
Metcalf, Isaac
Sun, Shuo
Zhang, Bo
Guo, Yinsheng
Reddy, G. N. Manjunatha
Katan, Claudine
Even, Jacky
Sfeir, Matthew Y.
Kanatzidis, Mercouri G.
Mohite, Aditya D.
author_facet Hou, Jin
Fletcher, Jared
Hall, Siedah J.
Zhang, Hao
Zacharias, Marios
Volonakis, George
Welton, Claire
Mandani, Faiz
Metcalf, Isaac
Sun, Shuo
Zhang, Bo
Guo, Yinsheng
Reddy, G. N. Manjunatha
Katan, Claudine
Even, Jacky
Sfeir, Matthew Y.
Kanatzidis, Mercouri G.
Mohite, Aditya D.
contents Realizing semiconductors with high symmetry of their crystallographic structures has been a virtue of inorganic materials and has resulted in novel physical behaviors. In contrast, hybrid (organic and inorganic) crystals such as two-dimensional metal halide perovskites exhibit much lower crystal symmetry due to in-plane or out of plane octahedral distortions. Despite their amazing ability for photoinduced light emission at room temperature, the Achilles' heel of this attractive class of 2D materials for optoelectronics remains the poor control and lack of performance for charge carrier transport. Inspired by the tremendous charge carrier properties of the 3D cubic perovskite phase of FAPbI3 and combining the use of the appropriate cage cation, the spacer molecule and the temperature and rate of crystallization, we report a new series of FA-based layered two-dimensional perovskites that exhibits the highest theoretically predicted symmetry with a tetragonal P4/mmm space group, resulting in no octahedral distortion in both in-plane and out-of-plane directions. These 2D perovskites present the shortest interlayer distances (4 angstrom), which results in systematically lower bandgaps (1.7 to 1.8 eV). Finally, the absence of octahedral distortions, results in an exciton diffusion length of 2.5 μm, and a diffusivity of 4.4 cm2s-1, both of which are an order of magnitude larger compared to previously reported 2D perovskites and on par with monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_08121
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Two-dimensional perovskites with maximum symmetry enable exciton diffusion length exceeding 2 micrometers
Hou, Jin
Fletcher, Jared
Hall, Siedah J.
Zhang, Hao
Zacharias, Marios
Volonakis, George
Welton, Claire
Mandani, Faiz
Metcalf, Isaac
Sun, Shuo
Zhang, Bo
Guo, Yinsheng
Reddy, G. N. Manjunatha
Katan, Claudine
Even, Jacky
Sfeir, Matthew Y.
Kanatzidis, Mercouri G.
Mohite, Aditya D.
Materials Science
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Realizing semiconductors with high symmetry of their crystallographic structures has been a virtue of inorganic materials and has resulted in novel physical behaviors. In contrast, hybrid (organic and inorganic) crystals such as two-dimensional metal halide perovskites exhibit much lower crystal symmetry due to in-plane or out of plane octahedral distortions. Despite their amazing ability for photoinduced light emission at room temperature, the Achilles' heel of this attractive class of 2D materials for optoelectronics remains the poor control and lack of performance for charge carrier transport. Inspired by the tremendous charge carrier properties of the 3D cubic perovskite phase of FAPbI3 and combining the use of the appropriate cage cation, the spacer molecule and the temperature and rate of crystallization, we report a new series of FA-based layered two-dimensional perovskites that exhibits the highest theoretically predicted symmetry with a tetragonal P4/mmm space group, resulting in no octahedral distortion in both in-plane and out-of-plane directions. These 2D perovskites present the shortest interlayer distances (4 angstrom), which results in systematically lower bandgaps (1.7 to 1.8 eV). Finally, the absence of octahedral distortions, results in an exciton diffusion length of 2.5 μm, and a diffusivity of 4.4 cm2s-1, both of which are an order of magnitude larger compared to previously reported 2D perovskites and on par with monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides.
title Two-dimensional perovskites with maximum symmetry enable exciton diffusion length exceeding 2 micrometers
topic Materials Science
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08121