Unique halide perovskite heterojunctions for next-generation optoelectronic devices
Joey Luther a b, Young-Hoon Kim a b, Ji Hao a b, Steven Harvey a, Jeffrey Blackburn a b, Matthew Beard a b
a Chemical and Nanoscience Center, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Evergreen, Colorado 80401, EE. UU., Evergreen, United States
b Center for Hybrid Organic Inorganic Semiconductors for Energy, Golden, CO, USA
Materials for Sustainable Development Conference (MATSUS)
Proceedings of nanoGe Fall Meeting 2021 (NFM21)
#SPMEn21. Visualising nanoscale phenomena in functional materials
Online, Spain, 2021 October 18th - 22nd
Organizers: Stefan Weber, Brian Rodriguez and Juliane Borchert
Invited Speaker, Joey Luther, presentation 240
DOI: https://doi.org/10.29363/nanoge.nfm.2021.240
Publication date: 23rd September 2021

Halide perovskite semiconductors are making waves for their exceptional performance as photovoltaic materials, but since they are such profound optoelectronic materials, discovery is underway to elucidate additional breakthrough applications. In this talk, we will show how forming heterojunctions containing perovskites enable unconventional control over spin, charge and light. 
In traditional optoelectronic approaches, control over spin, charge, and light requires the use of both electrical and magnetic fields. In a spin-polarized light-emitting diode (spin-LED), charges are injected, and circularly polarized light is emitted from spin-polarized carrier pairs. Typically, the injection of carriers occurs with the application of an electric field, whereas spin polarization can be achieved using an applied magnetic field or polarized ferromagnetic contacts. Here, we used chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS) to produce spin-polarized carriers and demonstrate a spin-LED that operates at room temperature without magnetic fields or ferromagnetic contacts. The CISS layer consists of oriented, self-assembled small chiral molecules within a layered organic-inorganic metal-halide hybrid semiconductor framework. The spin-LED achieves ±2.6% circularly polarized electroluminescence at room temperature.[1]
Long-lived photon-stimulated conductance changes in solid-state materials can enable optical memory and brain-inspired neuromorphic information processing. It remains challenging to realize optical switching with low-energy consumption, and new mechanisms and design principles giving rise to persistent photoconductivity (PPC) can help overcome an important technological hurdle. Here, we demonstrate versatile heterojunctions between metal-halide perovskite nanocrystals and semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes that enable room-temperature, long-lived (thousands of seconds), writable, and erasable PPC. Optical switching and basic neuromorphic functions can be stimulated at low operating voltages with femto- to pico-joule energies per spiking event, and detailed analysis demonstrates that PPC in this nanoscale interface arises from field-assisted control of ion migration within the nanocrystal array. Contactless optical measurements also suggest these systems as potential candidates for photonic synapses that are stimulated and read in the optical domain. The tunability of PPC shown here holds promise for neuromorphic computing and other technologies that use optical memory.[2]

 

[1] Kim et al., Science 371, 1129–1133 (2021) 10.1126/science.abf5291

[2] Hao et al., Sci Adv. 2021 Apr; 7(18): eabf1959.  10.1126/sciadv.abf1959

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