Quantitative Specifications to Avoid Degradation during E-Beam and Induced Current Microscopy of Halide Perovskite Devices

2020 
Degradation due to electron beam exposure has posed a challenge in the use of electron microscopy to probe halide perovskite materials and devices. In this study, the interaction between the electron beam and the perovskite across acceleration voltages and at low probe currents is investigated in a scanning electron microscope (SEM) by monitoring the electron-beam-induced current (EBIC) response in perovskite solar cells in a plan-view configuration. SEM probe conditions are identified where dozens of repeated scans over a single region of the perovskite solar cell induce minimal electronic degradation. Overall, the induced current response of the perovskite device is found to strongly depend upon the beam condition: rapid decay occurs at high beam powers, the current activates at the lowest beam powers, and a newfound quasi-steady response is revealed at intermediate beam conditions. A quantitative window for the successful conduction of e-beam studies with minimal electronic degradation is revealed by evaluating induced current response over a wide range of perovskite devices, which invites broader use of SEM-based characterization techniques, including EBIC, as powerful techniques for correlative microscopy investigations.
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