Microsecond Carrier Lifetimes, Controlled p鈥慏oping, and Enhanced Air Stability in Low-Bandgap Metal Halide Perovskites

ACS Energy Letters American Chemical Society (ACS) 4:9 (2019) 2301-2307

Authors:

Alan R Bowman, Matthew T Klug, Tiarnan AS Doherty, Michael D Farrar, Satyaprasad P Senanayak, Bernard Wenger, Giorgio Divitini, Edward P Booker, Zahra Andaji-Garmaroudi, Stuart Macpherson, Edoardo Ruggeri, Henning Sirringhaus, Henry J Snaith, Samuel D Stranks

Impurity tracking enables enhanced control and reproducibility of hybrid perovskite vapour deposition

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces American Chemical Society 11:32 (2019) 28851-28857

Authors:

Juliane Borchert, I Levchuk, Lavina Snoek, Mathias Rothmann, Ren茅e Haver, Henry Snaith, CJ Brabec, Laura Herz, Michael Johnston

Abstract:

Metal halide perovskite semiconductors have the potential to enable low-cost, flexible and efficient solar cells for a wide range of applications. Physical vapour deposition by co-evaporation of precursors is a method which results in very smooth and pin-hole-free perovskite thin films and allows excellent control over film thickness and composition. However, for a deposition method to become industrially scalable, reproducible process control and high device yields are essential. Unfortunately, to date the control and reproducibility of evaporating organic precursors such as methylammonium iodide (MAI) has proved extremely challenging. We show that the established method of controlling the evaporation-rate of MAI with quartz micro balances (QMBs) is critically sensitive to the concentration of the impurities MAH2PO3 and MAH2PO2 that are usually present in MAI after synthesis. Therefore, controlling the deposition rate of MAI with QMBs is unreliable since the concentration of such impurities typically varies from MAI batch-to-batch and even during the course of a deposition. However once reliable control of MAI deposition is achieved, we find that the presence of precursor impurities during perovskite deposition does not degrade solar cell performance. Our results indicate that as long as precursor deposition rates are well controlled, physical vapour deposition will allow high solar cell device yields even if the purity of precursors change from run to run.

Growth modes and quantum confinement in ultrathin vapour-deposited MAPbI3 films

Nanoscale Royal Society of Chemistry 11:30 (2019) 14276

Authors:

ES Parrott, J Patel, AA Haghighirad, Henry Snaith, Michael Johnston, Laura Herz

Abstract:

Vapour deposition of metal halide perovskite by co-evaporation of precursors has the potential to achieve large-area high-efficiency solar cells on an industrial scale, yet little is known about the growth of metal halide perovskites by this method at the current time. Here, we report the fabrication of MAPbI3 films with average thicknesses from 2 鈥 320 nm by co-evaporation. We analyze the film properties using X-ray diffraction, optical absorption and photoluminescence (PL) to provide insights into the nucleation and growth of MAPbI3 films on quartz substrates. We find that the perovskite initially forms crystallite islands of around 8 nm in height, which may be the cause of the persistent small grain sizes reported for evaporated metal halide perovskites that hinder device efficiency and stability. As more material is added, islands coalesce until full coverage of the substrate is reached at around 10 nm average thickness. We also find that quantum confinement induces substantial shifts to the PL wavelength when the average thickness is below 40 nm, offering dual-source vapour deposition as an alternative method of fabricating nanoscale structures for LEDs and other devices.

Charge-carrier dynamics, mobilities and diffusion lengths of 2D-3D hybrid butylammonium-caesium-formamidinium lead halide perovskites

Advanced Functional Materials Wiley (2019)

Authors:

Leonardo Buizza, Timothy Crothers, Zhiping Wang, Patel Jay, R Milot, Henry Snaith, Michael Johnston, Laura Herz

Abstract:

Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have improved dramatically over the past decade, increasing in efficiency and gradually overcoming hurdles of temperature鈥 and humidity鈥恑nduced instability. Materials that combine high charge鈥恈arrier lifetimes and mobilities, strong absorption, and good crystallinity of 3D perovskites with the hydrophobic properties of 2D perovskites have become particularly promising candidates for use in solar cells. In order to fully understand the optoelectronic properties of these 2D鈥3D hybrid systems, the hybrid perovskite BAx(FA0.83Cs0.17)1鈥恱Pb(I0.6Br0.4)3 is investigated across the composition range 0 鈮 x 鈮 0.8. Small amounts of butylammonium (BA) are found that help to improve crystallinity and appear to passivate grain boundaries, thus reducing trap鈥恗ediated charge鈥恈arrier recombination and enhancing charge鈥恈arrier mobilities. Excessive amounts of BA lead to poor crystallinity and inhomogeneous film formation, greatly reducing effective charge鈥恈arrier mobility. For low amounts of BA, the benevolent effects of reduced recombination and enhanced mobilities lead to charge鈥恈arrier diffusion lengths up to 7.7 碌m for x = 0.167. These measurements pave the way for highly efficient, highly stable PSCs and other optoelectronic devices based on 2D鈥3D hybrid materials.

Effect of ultraviolet radiation on organic photovoltaic materials and devices

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces American Chemical Society 11:24 (2019) 21543-21551

Authors:

Jay Patel, P Tiwana, N Seidler, GE Morse, OR Lozman, Michael Johnston, Laura Herz

Abstract:

Organic photovoltaics are a sustainable and cost-effective power-generation technology that may aid the move to zero-emission buildings, carbon neutral cities, and electric vehicles. While state-of-the-art organic photovoltaic devices can be encapsulated to withstand air and moisture, they are currently still susceptible to light-induced degradation, leading to a decline in the long-term efficiency of the devices. In this study, the role of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on a multilayer organic photovoltaic device is systematically uncovered using spectral filtering. By applying long-pass filters to remove different parts of the UV portion of the AM1.5G spectrum, two main photodegradation processes are shown to occur in the organic photovoltaic devices. A UV-activated process is found to cause a significant decrease in the photocurrent across the whole spectrum and is most likely linked to the deterioration of the charge extraction layers. In addition, a photodegradation process caused by UV-filtered sunlight is found to change the micromorphology of the bulk heterojunction material, leading to a reduction in photocurrent at high photon energies. These findings strongly suggest that the fabrication of inherently photostable organic photovoltaic devices will require the replacement of fullerene-based electron transporter materials with alternative organic semiconductors.