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Photoinduced interfacial electron transfer from perovskite quantum dots to molecular acceptors for solar cells.

Bhagyashree Mahesha SachithZhijing ZhangPalyam SubramanyamChallapalli SubrahmanyamAkihiro FurubeNaoto TamaiTakuya OkamotoHiroaki MisawaVasudevanpillai Biju
Published in: Nanoscale (2023)
Bandgap-engineered inorganic and hybrid halide perovskite (HP) films, nanocrystals, and quantum dots (PQDs) are promising for solar cells. Fluctuations of photoinduced electron transfer (PET) rates affect the interfacial charge separation efficiencies of such solar cells. Electron donor- or acceptor-doped perovskite samples help analyze PET and harvest photogenerated charge carriers efficiently. Therefore, PET in perovskite-based donor-acceptor (D-A) systems has received considerable attention. We analyzed the fluctuations of interfacial PET from MAPbBr 3 or CsPbBr 3 PQDs to classical electron acceptors such as 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ) and 1,2,4,5-tetracyanobenzene (TCNB) at single-particle and ensemble levels. The significantly negative Gibbs free energy changes of PET estimated from the donor-acceptor redox potentials, the donor-acceptor sizes, and the solvent dielectric properties help us clarify the PET in the above D-A systems. The dynamic nature of PET is apparent from the decrease in photoluminescence (PL) lifetimes and PL photocounts of PQDs with an increase in the acceptor concentrations. Also, the acceptor radical anion spectrum helps us characterize the charge-separated states. Furthermore, the PL blinking time and PET rate fluctuations (10 8 to 10 7 s -1 ) provide us with single-molecule level information about interfacial PET in perovskites.
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