We have developed a charge transport model that explicitly accounts for ion migration. This model has been used to interpret measured current–voltage characteristics that show hysteresis.
Thin
film lead halide perovskite cells, where the perovskite layer is deposited
directly onto a flat titania blocking layer, have reached AM 1.5 efficiencies
of over 15%, showing that the mesoporous
scaffold used in early types of perovskite solar cells is not essential.
We used a variety of techniques to gain a better understanding of
thin film perovskite cells prepared by a solution-based method. Twelve
cells were studied, which showed AM 1.5 efficiencies of ∼11%.
The properties of the cells were investigated using impedance spectroscopy,
intensity-modulated photovoltage spectroscopy (IMVS), intensity-modulated
photocurrent spectroscopy (IMPS), and open-circuit photovoltage decay
(OCVD). Despite the fact that all 12 cells were prepared at the same
time under nominally identical conditions, their behavior fell into
two distinct groups. One half of the cells exhibited ideality factors of m ≈
2.5, and the other half showed ideality factors of m ≈ 5. Impedance spectroscopy carried out under illumination
at open circuit for a range of intensities showed that the cell capacitance
was dominated by the geometric capacitance of the perovskite layer
rather than the chemical or diffusion capacitance due to photogenerated
carriers. The voltage dependence of the recombination resistance gave
ideality factors similar to those derived from the intensity dependence
of the open-circuit voltage. The IMVS time constant was determined
by the product of the geometric capacitance and the recombination
resistance. The two types of cells gave very different OCVD responses.
The cells with m ≈ 2.5 showed a persistent
photovoltage effect that was absent in the case of the cells with
higher ideality factors. The IMPS responses provide evidence of minor
efficiency losses by recombination under short-circuit conditions.
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