- Luo, Deying;
- Zou, Taoyu;
- Yang, Wengqiang;
- Xiang, Beng;
- Yang, Xiaoyu;
- Wang, Ya;
- Su, Rui;
- Zhao, Lichen;
- Zhu, Rui;
- Zhou, Hang;
- Russell, Thomas P;
- Yu, Hongyu;
- Lu, Zheng‐Hong
Controlling defects and energy-band alignments are of paramount importance to the development of high-performance perovskite-based photodiodes. Yet, concurrent improvements in interfacial contacts and defect reduction simply by tailoring bottom contacts have not been investigated. An effective strategy is reported that can simultaneously improve energy-band alignments and structural defects by introducing low-dimensional contact (LDC) layers at the bottom interface. It is found that LDC-based perovskites considerably suppress undesirable structural defects induced by microstrains, resulting in reduced nonradiative recombination centers and improved carrier lifetimes. Additionally, the resulting LDC-based interface structures help block minority carrier injection from the electrodes by forming built-in electric fields. As a consequence, LDC-based perovskite photodiodes showed improved light detection capabilities. The result opens an avenue to yield highly efficient photodiodes.