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Perovskite Core-Shell Nanowire Transistors: Interfacial Transfer Doping and Surface Passivation.

You MengZhengxun LaiFangzhou LiWei WangSenPo YipQuan QuanXiuming BuFei WangYan BaoTakuro HosomiTsunaki TakahashiKazuki NagashimaTakeshi YanagidaJian LuJohnny C Ho
Published in: ACS nano (2020)
While halide perovskite electronics are rapidly developing, they are greatly limited by the inferior charge transport and poor stability. In this work, effective surface charge transfer doping of vapor-liquid-solid (VLS)-grown single-crystalline cesium lead bromide perovskite (CsPbBr3) nanowires (NWs) via molybdenum trioxide (MoO3) surface functionalization is achieved. Once fabricated into NW devices, due to the efficient interfacial charge transfer and reduced impurity scattering, a 15× increase in the field-effect hole mobility (μh) from 1.5 to 23.3 cm2/(V s) is accomplished after depositing the 10 nm thick MoO3 shell. This enhanced mobility is already better than any mobility value reported for perovskite field-effect transistors (FETs) to date. The photodetection performance of these CsPbBr3/MoO3 core-shell NWs is also investigated to yield a superior responsivity (R) up to 2.36 × 103 A/W and an external quantum efficiency (EQE) of over 5.48 × 105% toward the 532 nm regime. Importantly, the MoO3 shell can provide excellent surface passivation to the CsPbBr3 NW core that minimizes the diffusion of detrimental water and oxygen molecules, improving the air stability of CsPbBr3/MoO3 core-shell NW devices. All these findings evidently demonstrate the surface doping as an enabling technology to realize high-mobility and air-stable low-dimensional halide perovskite devices.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • room temperature
  • perovskite solar cells
  • ionic liquid
  • high efficiency
  • photodynamic therapy
  • mass spectrometry
  • atomic force microscopy