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Benign ferroelastic twin boundaries in halide perovskites for charge carrier transport and recombination

Abstract
Grain boundaries have been established to impact charge transport, recombination and thus the power conversion efficiency of metal halide perovskite thin film solar cells. As a special category of grain boundaries, ferroelastic twin boundaries have been recently discovered to exist in both CH3NH3PbI3 thin films and single crystals. However, their impact on the carrier transport and recombination in perovskites remains unexplored. Here, using the scanning photocurrent microscopy, we find that twin boundaries have negligible influence on the carrier transport across them. Photoluminescence (PL) imaging and the spatial-resolved PL intensity and lifetime scanning confirm the electronically benign nature of the twin boundaries, in striking contrast to regular grain boundaries which block the carrier transport and behave as the non-radiative recombination centers. Finally, the twin-boundary areas are found still easier to degrade than grain interior.

(a) and (b) Confocal PL intensity and lifetime mapping of TBs; (c) The proposed energetic diagram of MAPbI3 with GBs (left panel) or TBs (right panel) exhibiting the origin of their different impacts on charge carrier transport and recombination.