A water-stable thin film composed of C6H4NH2CuCl2I was fabricated using spin-coating precursor solutions that dissolved equimolar amounts of C6H4NH2I and CuCl2 in N,N-dimethylformamide. Photoelectrochemical characteristics show that the C6H4NH2CuCl2I film demonstrated a stable photocurrent (∼1 μA/cm2) in an aqueous solution under white light (11.5 mW/cm2) even after 3000 s, while exhibiting a photon-to-current efficiency of 0.093% under AM1.5 (100 mW/cm2) illumination. However, these values were significantly lower than those of the CH3NH3PbX3 (X = I, Cl) film in solid devices. The electron diffusion length L(e-) (373 nm) and hole diffusion length L(h+) (177 nm) in the C6H4NH2CuCl2I photoelectrode were significantly lower than those of CH3NH3PbX3, limiting the photoelectrochemical and photocatalysis performances. Moreover, L(h+) was shorter than L(e-) in the C6H4NH2CuCl2I photoelectrode, resulting in the hole-collecting efficiency [ηc(h+)] being lower than the electron-collecting efficiency [ηc(e-)]. A CuO interlayer was introduced as a hole transport layer for the C6H4NH2CuCl2I photoelectrode, which improved L(h+) and ηc(h+).
Keywords: C6H4NH2CuCl2I; IMPS/IMVS; charge transport; perovskite; photocatalysis; photoelectrochemical cell.