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Light soaking in metal halide perovskites studied via steady-state microwave conductivity

C Lowell Watts, Lee Aspitarte, Yen‐Hung Lin, Wen Li, Radwan Elzein, Rafik Addou, Min Ji Hong, Gregory S. Herman, Henry J. Snaith, John G. Labram

2020Communications Physics28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The light-soaking effect is the observation that under constant illumination the measured power conversion efficiency of certain solar cells changes as a function of time. The theory of the light-soaking in metal halide perovskites is at present incomplete. In this report, we employ steady-state microwave conductivity, a contactless probe of electronic properties of semiconductors, to study the light-soaking effect in metal halide perovskites. By illuminating isolated thin films of two mixed-cation perovskites with AM1.5 solar illumination, we observe a continual increase in photoconductance over a period of many (>12) hours. We can fit the experimentally observed changes in photoconductance to a stretched exponential function, in an analogous manner to bias-stressed thin-film transistors. The information provided in this report should help the community better understand one of the most perplexing open problems in the field of perovskite solar cells and, ultimately, lead to more robust and predictable devices.

Topics & Concepts

Perovskite (structure)HalideMaterials scienceSemiconductorOptoelectronicsConductivityMicrowaveMetalThin filmEnergy conversion efficiencyChemistryInorganic chemistryNanotechnologyPhysical chemistryCrystallographyPhysicsMetallurgyQuantum mechanicsPerovskite Materials and ApplicationsChalcogenide Semiconductor Thin FilmsOrganic and Molecular Conductors Research
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