Large tunable photoeffect on ion conduction in halide perovskites and implications for photodecomposition

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Abstract

In the same way as electron transport is crucial for information technology, ion transport is a key phenomenon in the context of energy research. To be able to tune ion conduction by light would open up opportunities for a wide realm of new applications, but it has been challenging to provide clear evidence for such an effect. Here we show through various techniques, such as transference-number measurements, permeation studies, stoichiometric variations, Hall effect experiments and the use of blocking electrodes, that light excitation enhances by several orders of magnitude the ionic conductivity of methylammonium lead iodide, the archetypal metal halide photovoltaic material. We provide a rationale for this unexpected phenomenon and show that it straightforwardly leads to a hitherto unconsidered photodecomposition path of the perovskite.

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Kim, G. Y., Senocrate, A., Yang, T. Y., Gregori, G., Grätzel, M., & Maier, J. (2018). Large tunable photoeffect on ion conduction in halide perovskites and implications for photodecomposition. Nature Materials, 17(5), 445–449. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41563-018-0038-0

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