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Phase Segregation Enhanced Ion Movement in Efficient Inorganic CsPbIBr2 Solar Cells
Authors:Wei Li  Mathias Uller Rothmann  Amelia Liu  Ziyu Wang  Yupeng Zhang  Alexander R Pascoe  Jianfeng Lu  Liangcong Jiang  Yu Chen  Fuzhi Huang  Yong Peng  Qiaoliang Bao  Joanne Etheridge  Udo Bach  Yi‐Bing Cheng
Institution:1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;2. ARC Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;3. Monash Centre for Electron Microscopy, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;4. School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;5. School of Chemistry, Monash University, Victoria, Australia;6. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Processing, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan, China;7. Melbourne Centre for Nano fabrication, Clayton, Victoria, Australia;8. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Manufacturing Flagship, Clayton, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:Organic–inorganic hybrid perovskite solar cells with mixed cations and mixed halides have achieved impressive power conversion efficiency of up to 22.1%. Phase segregation due to the mixed compositions has attracted wide concerns, and their nature and origin are still unclear. Some very useful analytical techniques are controversial in microstructural and chemical analyses due to electron beam‐induced damage to the “soft” hybrid perovskite materials. In this study photoluminescence, cathodoluminescence, and transmission electron microscopy are used to study charge carrier recombination and retrieve crystallographic and compositional information for all‐inorganic CsPbIBr2 films on the nanoscale. It is found that under light and electron beam illumination, “iodide‐rich” CsPbI(1+x )Br(2?x ) phases form at grain boundaries as well as segregate as clusters inside the film. Phase segregation generates a high density of mobile ions moving along grain boundaries as ion migration “highways.” Finally, these mobile ions can pile up at the perovskite/TiO2 interface resulting in formation of larger injection barriers, hampering electron extraction and leading to strong current density–voltage hysteresis in the polycrystalline perovskite solar cells. This explains why the planar CsPbIBr2 solar cells exhibit significant hysteresis in efficiency measurements, showing an efficiency of up to 8.02% in the reverse scan and a reduced efficiency of 4.02% in the forward scan, and giving a stabilized efficiency of 6.07%.
Keywords:cathodoluminescence  hysteresis  inorganic perovskite solar cells  ion movement  phase segregation
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