MRS Meetings and Events

 

EQ02.03.01 2022 MRS Spring Meeting

Detecting Defects Evolution in Operational Perovskite Solar Cells

When and Where

May 10, 2022
8:30am - 9:00am

Hawai'i Convention Center, Level 3, 319A

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Jinsong Huang1,Zhenyi Ni1

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill1

Abstract

Jinsong Huang1,Zhenyi Ni1

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill1
Electronic defects within the band gap of semiconductor materials play critical roles in determining the efficiency and stability of their photovoltaic devices. Eliminating deleterious defects in semiconductors or passivating them during the fabrication process of solar cells has become one of the most fundamental tasks for the solar cell society. This scenario is also prevailing in the metal halide perovskite solar cell community which has witnessed a rapid increase of the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of perovskite solar cells from 3.8% to 25.5% with overwhelming reported progress on defect passivation strategies which also enhance the stability of perovskite solar cells. Any further improvement of the efficiency or stability of perovskite solar cells toward their Shockley-Queisser limitations have to rely on deeper understandings on the nature of defects in perovskite to squeeze out all non-radiative charge recombination paths by eliminating or passivating them. <br/>Defects in perovskites have already been intensively studied in recent years, but there is still no consensus on the defect chemical nature, their distributions, and their evolution during degradation. For example, calculations gave controversial results, i.e. different defects, including halide interstitials ( and ), metal vacancies (V<sub>Pb</sub>) or antisite (I<sub>MA</sub>), that cause deep traps in the most studied and simplest perovskite of methylammonium lead triiodide (MAPbI<sub>3</sub>). In this talk, I will first present our demonstration that using the drive-level capacitance profiling (DLCP) technique to profile both the spatial and energetic distributions of charge traps in perovskite solar cells. Then I will report our progress in combining the DLCP technique with electrical poling to determine the charge states and eventually the chemical nature of mobile defects in perovskites. This study revealed some astonishing discovery on the defects in perovskites of different compositions, and mechanism of solar cell degradation under reverse bias and under illumination.

Keywords

perovskites

Symposium Organizers

Hua Zhou, Argonne National Laboratory
Carmela Aruta, National Research Council
Panchapakesan Ganesh, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Yuanyuan Zhou, Hong Kong Baptist University

Symposium Support

Silver
Journal of Energy Chemistry | Science China Press Co. Ltd

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature