posted on 2019-01-10, 00:00authored byAndrew
H. Proppe, Madeline H. Elkins, Oleksandr Voznyy, Ryan D. Pensack, Felipe Zapata, Lucas V. Besteiro, Li Na Quan, Rafael Quintero-Bermudez, Petar Todorovic, Shana O. Kelley, Alexander O. Govorov, Stephen K. Gray, Ivan Infante, Edward H. Sargent, Gregory D. Scholes
Solution-processed
perovskite quantum wells have been used to fabricate
increasingly efficient and stable optoelectronic devices. Little is
known about the dynamics of photogenerated excitons in perovskite
quantum wells within the first few hundred femtosecondsa crucial
time scale on which energy and charge transfer processes may compete.
Here we use ultrafast transient absorption and two-dimensional electronic
spectroscopy to clarify the movement of excitons and charges in reduced-dimensional
perovskite solids. We report excitonic funneling from strongly to
weakly confined perovskite quantum wells within 150 fs, facilitated
by strong spectral overlap and orientational alignment among neighboring
wells. This energy transfer happens on time scales orders of magnitude
faster than charge transfer, which we find to occur instead over 10s
to 100s of picoseconds. Simulations of both Förster-type interwell
exciton transfer and free carrier charge transfer are in agreement
with these experimental findings, with theoretical exciton transfer
calculated to occur in 100s of femtoseconds.