We use ultrasonic spray-coating to fabricate caesium containing triple-cation perovskite solar cells having a power conversion efficiency up to 17.8%. Our fabrication route involves a brief exposure of the partially wet spray-cast films to a coarse-vacuum; a process that is used to control film crystallisation. We show that films that are not vacuum exposed are relatively rough and inhomogeneous, while vacuum exposed films are smooth and consist of small and densely-packed perovskite crystals. The process techniques developed here represent a step towards a scalable and industrially compatible manufacturing process capable of creating stable and high-performance perovskite solar cells.
The
development of scalable deposition methods for perovskite solar cell
materials is critical to enable the commercialization of this nascent
technology. Herein, we investigate the use and processing of nanoparticle
SnO2 films as electron transport layers in perovskite solar
cells and develop deposition methods for ultrasonic spray coating
and slot-die coating, leading to photovoltaic device efficiencies
over 19%. The effects of postprocessing treatments (thermal annealing,
UV ozone, and O2 plasma) are then probed using structural
and spectroscopic techniques to characterize the nature of the np-SnO2/perovskite interface. We show that a brief “hot air
flow” method can be used to replace extended thermal annealing,
confirming that this approach is compatible with high-throughput processing.
Our results highlight the importance of interface management to minimize
nonradiative losses and provide a deeper understanding of the processing
requirements for large-area deposition of nanoparticle metal oxides.
The addition of alkali metal halides to hybrid perovskite materials can significantly impact their crystallisation and hence their performance when used in solar cell devices.
Mixed cation perovskites currently achieve very promising efficiency and operational stability when used as the active semiconductor in thin‐film photovoltaic devices. However, an in‐depth understanding of the structural and photophysical properties that drive this enhanced performance is still lacking. Here the prototypical mixed‐cation mixed‐halide perovskite (FAPbI3)0.85(MAPbBr3)0.15 is explored, and temperature‐dependent X‐ray diffraction measurements that are correlated with steady state and time‐resolved photoluminescence data are presented. The measurements indicate that this material adopts a pseudocubic perovskite α phase at room temperature, with a transition to a pseudotetragonal β phase occurring at ≈260 K. It is found that the temperature dependence of the radiative recombination rates correlates with temperature‐dependent changes in the structural configuration, and observed phase transitions also mark changes in the gradient of the optical bandgap. The work illustrates that temperature‐dependent changes in the perovskite crystal structure alter the charge carrier recombination processes and photoluminescence properties within such hybrid organic–inorganic materials. The findings have significant implications for photovoltaic performance at different operating temperatures, as well as providing new insight on the effect of alloying cations and halides on the phase behavior of hybrid perovskite materials.
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