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Tin-lead-metal halide perovskite solar cells with enhanced crystallinity and efficiency by addition of fluorinated long organic cation

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Highly performing mixed Sn/Pb-metal halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are among the most promising options to reduce Pb content in perovskite devices and enable, owing to their reduced bandgap, the fabrication of all-perovskite tandem solar cells. Whereas pure-Pb perovskite devices exhibit efficiency up to 25.5%, alongside a high open-circuit voltage (asymptotic to 1.2 V), Sn-Pb PSCs still show lower performances (22.2%) due to higher open-circuit voltage losses. Here, we introduced 2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorophenethylammonium cations in a perovskite active layer of composition (FASnI(3))(0.5)(MAPbI(3))(0.5) to obtain highly oriented films with improved thermal stability. The treated films exhibit merged grains with no evidence of 2D structures, which could help to reduce the trap state density at the surface and grain boundaries. Solar cells fabricated with the fluorinated cation added to the active layer displayed reduced trap-assisted recombination losses and lower background carrier density, which leads to enhanced open-circuit voltages with respect to the reference samples and the active layers incorporating unfluorinated phenethylammonium cations. The best device reached an efficiency of 19.13%, with an open-circuit voltage of 0.84 V, which is substantially improved with respect to the reference sample showing 17.47% efficiency and 0.77 V open-circuit voltage. More importantly, the fluorinated cations' addition is instrumental to improve the device's thermal stability; 90.3% of the solar cell initial efficiency is maintained after 90 min of thermal stress at 85 & nbsp;C in a nitrogen atmosphere.& nbsp;Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.
Journal: Applied Physics Reviews
ISSN: 1931-9401
Issue: 2
Volume: 9
Publication year:2022
Accessibility:Open