Accelerated Carrier Relaxation through Reduced Coulomb Screening in 2D Halide Perovskite Nanoplatelets
Verena A. Hintermayr, Lakshminarayana Polavarapu, Alexander S. Urban,, Jochen Feldmann

TL;DR
This study compares carrier relaxation in 2D and quasi-3D perovskite nanoplatelets, revealing faster, intensity-independent cooling in 2D due to reduced Coulomb screening, with implications for high-speed optoelectronic devices.
Contribution
It demonstrates how reduced Coulomb screening in 2D perovskites accelerates carrier relaxation, contrasting with quasi-3D structures, and highlights environmental effects on dynamics.
Findings
Faster, intensity-independent cooling in 2D perovskites
Sub-picosecond exciton dissociation in quasi-3D nanoplatelets
Potential for THz-frequency optoelectronic devices
Abstract
For high-speed optoelectronic applications relying on fast relaxation or energy transfer mechanisms, understanding of carrier relaxation and recombination dynamics is critical. Here, we compare the differences in photoexcited carrier dynamics in 2D and quasi-3D colloidal methylammonium lead iodide perovskite nanoplatelets via differential transmission spectroscopy. We find that the cooling of excited electron-hole pairs by phonon emission progresses much faster and is intensity-independent in the 2D-case. This is due to the low dielectric surrounding of the thin perovskite layers, for which the Fr\"ohlich interaction is screened less efficiently leading to higher and less density dependent carrier-phonon scattering rates. In addition, rapid dissipation of heat into the surrounding occurs due to the high surface-to-volume ratio. Furthermore, we observe a sub-picosecond dissociation of…
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