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Halide Perovskites: A New Class of Semiconductors with Emergent Functional Properties

Speaker
Aditya Mohite from Rice University
Date
Location
Melcher Hall rm 170

Halide (hybrid) perovskites (HaP) have emerged as a new class of semiconductors that truly encompass all the desired physical properties for building optoelectronic and quantum devices such as large tunable band-gaps, large absorption coefficients, long diffusion lengths, low effective mass, good mobility and long radiative lifetimes. In addition, HaPs are solution processed or low-temperature vapor grown semiconductors and are made from earth abundant materials thus making them technologically relevant in terms of cost/performance. As a result, proof-of-concept high efficiency optoelectronic devices such as photovoltaics and LEDs have been fabricated. In fact, photovoltaic efficiencies have sky rocketed to 24% merely in the past five years and are nearly on-par with mono-crystalline Si based solar cells. Such unprecedented progress has attracted tremendous interest among researchers to investigate the structure-function relationship and understand as to what makes Halide hybrid perovskites special?
In my talk, I will attempt to answer some of the key questions and in doing so share the results from our work on HaPs over the past four years in understanding structure induced properties of HaPs. I will also highlight fundamental bottlenecks that exist going forward which present opportunities to create platforms to understand the interplay between light, fields and structure on the properties of perovskite-based materials.