卤化物
钙钛矿(结构)
半导体
离子
二极管
纳米尺度
发光二极管
材料科学
光电子学
工作(物理)
纳米技术
化学物理
化学
物理
无机化学
结晶学
热力学
有机化学
作者
Sujit Kumar,Lothar Houben,Katya Rechav,David Cahen
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2114740119
摘要
Significance Surface engineering of halide perovskites (HaPs), semiconductors with amazing optoelectronic properties, is critical to improve the performance and ambient stability of HaP-based solar cells and light emitting diodes (LEDs). Ultrathin layers of two-dimensional (2D) analogs of the three-dimensional (3D) HaPs are particularly attractive for this because of their chemical similarities but higher ambient stability. But do such 2D/3D interfaces actually last, given that ions in HaPs move readily—i.e., what happens at those interfaces on the atomic scale? A special electron microscopy, which as a bonus also reveals the true conditions for nondestructive analysis, shows that the large ions that are a necessary part of the 2D films can move into the 3D HaP, a fascinating illustration of panta rei in HaPs.
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