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Spin Texture Sensitive Photodetection by Dion-Jacobson Tin Halide Perovskites.

Arnab MandalSanuja Kumar KhuntiaDebayan MondalPriya MahadevanSayan Bhattacharyya
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
The organic spacer molecule is known to regulate the optoelectronic properties of two-dimensional (2D) perovskites. We show that the spacer layer thickness determines the nature of optical transitions, direct or indirect, by controlling the structural properties of the inorganic layer. The spin-orbit interactions lead to different electron spin orientations for the states associated with the conduction band minimum (CBM) and the valence band maximum (VBM). This leads to a direct as well as an indirect component of the transitions, despite them being direct in momentum space. The shorter chains have a larger direct component, leading to a better optoelectronic performance. The mixed halide Sn 2+ Dion-Jacobson (DJ) perovskite with the shortest 4-C diammonium spacer outshines the photodetection parameters of those having longer (6-C and 8-C) spacers and the corresponding Ruddlesden-Popper (RP) phases. The DJ system with a 4-C spacer and equimolar Br/I embodies an unprecedentedly high responsivity of 78.1 A W -1 under 3 V potential bias at 485 nm wavelength, among the DJ perovskites. Without any potential bias, this phase manifests the self-powered photodetection parameters of 0.085 A W -1 and 9.9 × 10 10 jones. The unusual role of electron spin texture in these high-performance photodetectors of the lead-free DJ perovskites provides an avenue to exploit the information coded in spins for semiconductor devices without any ferromagnetic supplement or magnetic field.
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