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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Henry Snaith FRS

Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Snaith group
  • Advanced Device Concepts for Next-Generation Photovoltaics
Henry.Snaith@physics.ox.ac.uk
Robert Hooke Building, room G21
  • About
  • Publications

Determination of the exciton binding energy and effective masses for the methylammonium and formamidinium lead tri-halide perovskite family

(2015)

Authors:

Krzysztof Galkowski, Anatolie Mitioglu, Atsuhiko Miyata, Paulina Plochocka, Oliver Portugall, Giles E Eperon, Jacob Tse-Wei Wang, Thomas Stergiopoulos, Samuel D Stranks, Henry J Snaith, Robin J Nicholas
More details from the publisher

Temperature-dependent charge-carrier dynamics in CH3NH3PbI3 Perovskite thin films

Advanced Functional Materials Wiley 25:39 (2015) 6218-6227

Authors:

Rebecca L Milot, Giles E Eperon, Henry J Snaith, Michael Johnston, Laura Herz

Abstract:

The photoluminescence, transmittance, charge-carrier recombination dynamics, mobility, and diffusion length of CH3NH3PbI3 are investigated in the temperature range from 8 to 370 K. Profound changes in the optoelectronic properties of this prototypical photovoltaic material are observed across the two structural phase transitions occurring at 160 and 310 K. Drude-like terahertz photoconductivity spectra at all temperatures above 80 K suggest that charge localization effects are absent in this range. The monomolecular charge-carrier recombination rate generally increases with rising temperature, indicating a mechanism dominated by ionized impurity mediated recombination. Deduced activation energies Ea associated with ionization are found to increase markedly from the room-temperature tetragonal (Ea ≈ 20 meV) to the higher-temperature cubic (Ea ≈ 200 meV) phase adopted above 310 K. Conversely, the bimolecular rate constant decreases with rising temperature as charge-carrier mobility declines, while the Auger rate constant is highly phase specific, suggesting a strong dependence on electronic band structure. The charge-carrier diffusion length gradually decreases with rising temperature from about 3 μm at -93 °C to 1.2 μm at 67 °C but remains well above the optical absorption depth in the visible spectrum. These results demonstrate that there are no fundamental obstacles to the operation of cells based on CH3NH3PbI3 under typical field conditions. The photoconductivity in CH3NH3PbI3 thin films is investigated from 8 to 370 K across three structural phases. Analysis of the charge-carrier recombination dynamics reveals a variety of starkly differing recombination mechanisms. Evidence of charge-carrier localization is observed only at low temperature. High charge mobility and diffusion length are maintained at high temperature beyond the tetragonal-to-cubic phase transition at ≈310 K.
More details from the publisher
Details from ORA

Dye Monolayers Used as the Hole Transporting Medium in Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

Advanced Materials 27:39 (2015) 5889-5894

Authors:

D Moia, T Leijtens, N Noel, HJ Snaith, J Nelson, PRF Barnes

Abstract:

Dye-sensitized TiO2 can be used as the active layer of solar-cell devices without an additional hole-transporting material. In this architecture, holes are transported through the dye monolayer.
More details from the publisher

Temperature-dependent charge-carrier dynamics in CH3NH3PbI3 perovskite thin films

Advanced Functional Materials Wiley 25:39 (2015) 6218-6227

Authors:

Rebecca L Milot, Giles Eperon, Henry J Snaith, Michael Johnston, Laura Herz

Abstract:

The photoluminescence, transmittance, charge-carrier recombination dynamics, mobility, and diffusion length of CH3NH3PbI3 are investigated in the temperature range from 8 to 370 K. Profound changes in the optoelectronic properties of this prototypical photovoltaic material are observed across the two structural phase transitions occurring at 160 and 310 K. Drude-like terahertz photoconductivity spectra at all temperatures above 80 K suggest that charge localization effects are absent in this range. The monomolecular charge-carrier recombination rate generally increases with rising temperature, indicating a mechanism dominated by ionized impurity mediated recombination. Deduced activation energies Ea associated with ionization are found to increase markedly from the room-temperature tetragonal (Ea ≈ 20 meV) to the higher-temperature cubic (Ea ≈ 200 meV) phase adopted above 310 K. Conversely, the bimolecular rate constant decreases with rising temperature as charge-carrier mobility declines, while the Auger rate constant is highly phase specific, suggesting a strong dependence on electronic band structure. The charge-carrier diffusion length gradually decreases with rising temperature from about 3 μm at -93 °C to 1.2 μm at 67 °C but remains well above the optical absorption depth in the visible spectrum. These results demonstrate that there are no fundamental obstacles to the operation of cells based on CH3NH3PbI3 under typical field conditions.
More details from the publisher
Details from ORA
More details

Dye monolayers used as the hole transporting medium in dye-sensitized solar cells.

Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) 27:39 (2015) 5889-5894

Authors:

Davide Moia, Tomas Leijtens, Nakita Noel, Henry J Snaith, Jenny Nelson, Piers RF Barnes

Abstract:

Dye-sensitized TiO2 can be used as the active layer of solar-cell devices without an additional hole-transporting material. In this architecture, holes are transported through the dye monolayer.
More details from the publisher
More details
More details

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