Reactive Passivation of Wide-Bandgap Organic鈥揑norganic Perovskites with Benzylamine

Journal of the American Chemical Society American Chemical Society 146:40 (2024) 27405-27416

Authors:

Suer Zhou, Benjamin M Gallant, Junxiang Zhang, Yangwei Shi, Joel Smith, James N Drysdale, Pattarawadee Therdkatanyuphong, Margherita Taddei, Declan P McCarthy, Stephen Barlow, Rachel C Kilbride, Akash Dasgupta, Ashley R Marshall, Jian Wang, Dominik J Kubicki, David S Ginger, Seth R Marder, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

While amines are widely used as additives in metal-halide perovskites, our understanding of the way amines in perovskite precursor solutions impact the resultant perovskite film is still limited. In this paper, we explore the multiple effects of benzylamine (BnAm), also referred to as phenylmethylamine, used to passivate both FA0.75Cs0.25Pb颅(I0.8Br0.2)3 and FA0.8Cs0.2PbI3 perovskite compositions. We show that, unlike benzylammonium (BnA+) halide salts, BnAm reacts rapidly with the formamidinium (FA+) cation, forming new chemical products in solution and these products passivate the perovskite crystal domains when processed into a thin film. In addition, when BnAm is used as a bulk additive, the average perovskite solar cell maximum power point tracked efficiency (for 30 s) increased to 19.3% compared to the control devices 16.8% for a 1.68 eV perovskite. Under combined full spectrum simulated sunlight and 65 掳C temperature, the devices maintained a better T 80 stability of close to 2500 h while the control devices have T 80 stabilities of <100 h. We obtained similar results when presynthesizing the product BnFAI and adding it directly into the perovskite precursor solution. These findings highlight the mechanistic differences between amine and ammonium salt passivation, enabling the rational design of molecular strategies to improve the material quality and device performance of metal-halide perovskites.

Inhibiting the Appearance of Green Emission in Mixed Lead Halide Perovskite Nanocrystals for Pure Red Emission

Nano Letters American Chemical Society 24:39 (2024) 12045-12053

Authors:

Mutibah Alanazi, Ashley R Marshall, Yincheng Liu, Jinwoo Kim, Shaoni Kar, Henry J Snaith, Robert A Taylor, Tristan Farrow

Abstract:

Mixed halide perovskites exhibit promising optoelectronic properties for next-generation light-emitting diodes due to their tunable emission wavelength that covers the entire visible light spectrum. However, these materials suffer from severe phase segregation under continuous illumination, making long-term stability for pure red emission a significant challenge. In this study, we present a comprehensive analysis of the role of halide oxidation in unbalanced ion migration (I/Br) within CsPbI2Br nanocrystals and thin films. We also introduce a new approach using cyclic olefin copolymer (COC) to encapsulate CsPbI2Br perovskite nanocrystals (PNCs), effectively suppressing ion migration by increasing the corresponding activation energy. Compared with that of unencapsulated samples, we observe a substantial reduction in phase separation under intense illumination in PNCs with a COC coating. Our findings show that COC enhances phase stability by passivating uncoordinated surface defects (Pb2+ and I鈥), increasing the formation energy of halide vacancies, improving the charge carrier lifetime, and reducing the nonradiative recombination density.

Tetrapodal hole-collecting monolayer materials based on saddle-like cyclooctatetraene core for inverted perovskite solar cells

Angewandte Chemie International Edition Wiley (2024) e202412939

Authors:

Minh Anh Truong, Lucas Ueberricke, Tsukasa Funasaki, Yuta Adachi, Shota Hira, Shuaifeng Hu, Takumi Yamada, Naomu Sekiguchi, Tomoya Nakamura, Richard Murdey, Satoshi Iikubo, Yoshihiko Kanemitsu, Atsushi Wakamiya

Abstract:

Hole-collecting monolayers have greatly advanced the development of positive-intrinsic-negative perovskite solar cells (p-i-n PSCs). To date, however, most of the anchoring groups in the reported monolayer materials are designed to bind to the transparent conductive oxide (TCO) surface, resulting in less availability for other functions such as tuning the wettability of the monolayer surface. In this work, we developed two anchorable molecules, 4PATTI-C3 and 4PATTI-C4, by employing a saddle-like indole-fused cyclooctatetraene as a 蟺-core with four phosphonic acid anchoring groups linked through propyl or butyl chains. Both molecules form monolayers on TCO substrates. Thanks to the saddle shape of a cyclooctatetraene skeleton, two of the four phosphonic acid anchoring groups were found to point upward, resulting in hydrophilic surfaces. Compared to the devices using 4PATTI-C4 as the hole-collecting monolayer, 4PATTI-C3-based devices exhibit a faster hole-collection process, leading to higher power conversion efficiencies of up to 21.7鈥% and 21.4鈥% for a mini-cell (0.1鈥卌m<sup>2</sup>) and a mini-module (1.62鈥卌m<sup>2</sup>), respectively, together with good operational stability. This work represents how structural modification of multipodal molecules could substantially modulate the functions of the hole-collecting monolayers after being adsorbed onto TCO substrates.

Tetrapodal hole鈥恈ollecting monolayer materials based on saddle鈥恖ike cyclooctatetraene core for inverted perovskite solar cells

Angewandte Chemie Wiley (2024) e202412939

Authors:

Minh Anh Truong, Lucas Ueberricke, Tsukasa Funasaki, Yuta Adachi, Shota Hira, Shuaifeng Hu, Takumi Yamada, Naomu Sekiguchi, Tomoya Nakamura, Richard Murdey, Satoshi Iikubo, Yoshihiko Kanemitsu, Atsushi Wakamiya

Abstract:

Hole-collecting monolayers have greatly advanced the development of positive-intrinsic-negative perovskite solar cells (p-i-n PSCs). To date, however, most of the anchoring groups in the reported monolayer materials are designed to bind to the transparent conductive oxide (TCO) surface, resulting in less availability for other functions such as tuning the wettability of the monolayer surface. In this work, we developed two anchorable molecules, 4PATTI-C3 and 4PATTI-C4, by employing a saddle-like indole-fused cyclooctatetraene as a 蟺-core with four phosphonic acid anchoring groups linked through propyl or butyl chains. Both molecules form monolayers on TCO substrates. Thanks to the saddle shape of a cyclooctatetraene skeleton, two of the four phosphonic acid anchoring groups were found to point upward, resulting in hydrophilic surfaces. Compared to the devices using 4PATTI-C4 as the hole-collecting monolayer, 4PATTI-C3-based devices exhibit a faster hole-collection process, leading to higher power conversion efficiencies of up to 21.7鈥% and 21.4鈥% for a mini-cell (0.1鈥卌m2) and a mini-module (1.62鈥卌m2), respectively, together with good operational stability. This work represents how structural modification of multipodal molecules could substantially modulate the functions of the hole-collecting monolayers after being adsorbed onto TCO substrates.

GdWN3 is a nitride perovskite

Applied Physics Letters AIP Publishing 125:11 (2024) 112902

Authors:

Rebecca W Smaha, John S Mangum, Neha Yadav, Christopher L Rom, Brian M Wieliczka, Baptiste Julien, Andrew Treglia, Craig L Perkins, Prashun Gorai, Sage R Bauers, Andriy Zakutayev

Abstract:

Nitride perovskites ABN3 are an emerging and highly underexplored class of materials that are of interest due to their intriguing calculated ferroelectric, optoelectronic, and other functional properties. Incorporating novel A-site cations is one strategy to tune and expand such properties; for example, Gd3+ is compelling due to its large magnetic moment, potentially leading to multiferroic behavior. However, the theoretically predicted ground state of GdWN3 was a non-perovskite monoclinic structure. Here, we experimentally show that GdWN3鈭抷 crystallizes in a perovskite structure. High-throughput combinatorial sputtering with activated nitrogen is employed to synthesize thin films of Gd2鈭抶WxN3鈭抷Oy with oxygen content y鈥&lt;鈥0.05. Ex situ annealing crystallizes a polycrystalline perovskite phase in a narrow composition window near x鈥=鈥1. LeBail fits of synchrotron grazing incidence wide angle x-ray scattering data are consistent with a perovskite ground-state structure. Refined density functional theory calculations that included antiferromagnetic configurations confirm that the ground-state structure of GdWN3 is a distorted Pnma perovskite with antiferromagnetic ordering, in contrast to prior predictions. Initial property measurements find that GdWN3鈭抷 is paramagnetic down to T鈥=鈥2鈥塊 with antiferromagnetic correlations and that the absorption onset depends on cation stoichiometry. This work provides an important path toward both the rapid expansion of the emerging family of nitride perovskites and understanding their potential multiferroic properties.