Skip to main content Start main content

AP Seminar - Atomic-scale Microstructure of Lead Halide Perovskite Thin Films

Poster for Website_Atomic-scale
  • Date

    20 Jul 2023

  • Organiser

  • Time

    11:00 - 12:00

  • Venue

    CD620, 6/F, Wing CD, PolyU Map  

Speaker

Dr. Mathias Uller Rothmann

Summary

Understanding the atomic-scale crystallographic properties of photovoltaic semiconductor materials such as silicon, GaAs, and CdTe has been essential in their development from interesting materials to large-scale energy conversion industries. However, studying photoactive hybrid perovskites by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has proved particularly challenging due to the large electron energies typically employed in these studies. In particular, the very close structural relationship between a number of crystallographic orientations of the pristine perovskite and lead iodide has resulted in severe ambiguity in the interpretation of EM-derived information, severely impeding the advance of atomic resolution understanding of the materials.

Here, we successfully image the archetypal CH(NH2)2PbI3 (FAPbI3) and CH3NH3PbI3 (MAPbI3) hybrid perovskites in their thin-film form with atomic resolution using a carefully developed protocol of low-dose STEM. Our images enable a wide range of previously undescribed phenomena to be observed, including a remarkably highly ordered atomic arrangement of sharp grain boundaries and coherent perovskite/PbI2 interfaces, with a striking absence of long-range disorder in the crystal. These findings explain why inter-grain interfaces are not necessarily detrimental to perovskite solar cell performance, in contrast to what is commonly observed for other polycrystalline semiconductors. Additionally, we observe aligned point defects and dislocations that we identify to be climb-dissociated, and confirm the room-temperature phase of CH(NH2)2PbI3 to be cubic. We further demonstrate that degradation of the perovskite under electron irradiation leads to an initial loss of CH(NH2)2+ ions, leaving behind a partially unoccupied, but structurally intact, perovskite lattice, explaining the unusual regenerative properties of partly degraded perovskite films. Our findings thus provide a significant shift in our atomic-level understanding of this technologically important class of lead-halide perovskites.

 

Keynote Speaker

Dr. Mathias Uller Rothmann

Research Professor

Xianhu Laboratory, China

Mathias Uller Rothmann is a Natural Science Foundation of China Overseas Excellent Young Research Fellow at Foshan Xianhu Laboratory and has spent the last nine or so years studying photoactive perovskites with various electron microscope techniques. He obtained his M.Sc. in Physics and Nanotechnology Engineering from the Technical University of Denmark and his PhD in Materials Science and Engineering at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, which was followed by a postdoc at the University of Oxford. He has published several papers on electron microscopy and photoactive perovskites, including papers in Science and Nature Energy. He is the recipient of several awards, including the 2020 European Microscopy Society’s Outstanding Paper Award and the 2019 Mollie Holman award for best PhD thesis in the Monash Faculty of Engineering. He has previously worked as a brewer in a small craft brewery, and he has published popular science articles on brewing and sensory perception.

Your browser is not the latest version. If you continue to browse our website, Some pages may not function properly.

You are recommended to upgrade to a newer version or switch to a different browser. A list of the web browsers that we support can be found here