The formation of large polarons resulting from the Fröhlich coupling of photogenerated carriers with the polarized crystal lattice is considered crucial in shaping the outstanding optoelectronic properties in hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite crystals. Until now, the initial polaron dynamics after photoexcitation have remained elusive in the hybrid perovskite system. Here, based on the terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and optical-pump terahertz probe, we access the nature of interplay between photoexcited unbound charge carriers and optical phonons in MAPbBr3 within the initial 5 ps after excitation and have demonstrated the simultaneous existence of both electron- and hole-polarons, together with the photogenerated carrier dynamic process. Two resonant peaks in the frequency-dependent photoconductivity are interpreted by the Drude-Smith-Lorentz model along with the ab initio excitation calculation, revealing that the electron-/hole-polaron is related to the vibration modes of the stretched/contracted Pb-Br bond. The red /blue shift of the corresponding peaks as the fingerprints of electron-/hole-polaron provides a channel for observing their dynamic behavior. Different from polarons with long lifetime (>300 ps) in single-crystalline grains, we observed in thin films the transient process from the formation to the dissociation of polarons occurring at timescales within ∼5 ps, resulting from the Mott phase transition for carriers at high concentrations. Moreover, the observation of the polaron dynamic process of the virtual state-assisted band gap transition (800 nm excitation) further reveals the competition of carriers cooling and polaron formation with photocarrier density. Our observations demonstrate a strategy for direct observation and manipulation of bipolar polaron transport in hybrid perovskites.
Keywords: THz spectroscopy; electron−phonon interaction; polaron; recombination; transient processes.