Universal growth of perovskite thin monocrystals from high solute flux for sensitive self-driven X-ray detection.
Da LiuYichu ZhengXin Yuan SuiXue Feng WuCan ZouYu PengXinyi LiuMiaoyu LinZhanpeng WeiHang ZhouYe-Feng YaoSheng DaiHaiyang YuanHai Yang YuanShuang YangYu HouPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Metal-halide perovskite thin monocrystals featuring efficient carrier collection and transport capabilities are well suited for radiation detectors, yet their growth in a generic, well-controlled manner remains challenging. Here, we reveal that mass transfer is one major limiting factor during solution growth of perovskite thin monocrystals. A general approach is developed to overcome synthetic limitation by using a high solute flux system, in which mass diffusion coefficient is improved from 1.7×10 -10 to 5.4×10 -10 m 2 s -1 by suppressing monomer aggregation. The generality of this approach is validated by the synthesis of 29 types of perovskite thin monocrystals at 40-90 °C with the growth velocity up to 27.2 μm min -1 . The as-grown perovskite monocrystals deliver a high X-ray sensitivity of 1.74×10 5 µC Gy -1 cm -2 without applied bias. The findings regarding limited mass transfer and high-flux crystallization are crucial towards advancing the preparation and application of perovskite thin monocrystals.