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Perovskite grain wrapping by converting interfaces and grain boundaries into robust and water-insoluble low-dimensional perovskites

Haoyang Jiao, Zhenyi Ni, Zhifang Shi, Chengbin Fei, Ye Liu, Xuezeng Dai, Jinsong Huang

2022Science Advances76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stabilizing perovskite solar cells requires consideration of all defective sites in the devices. Substantial efforts have been devoted to interfaces, while stabilization of grain boundaries received less attention. Here, we report on a molecule tributyl(methyl)phosphonium iodide (TPI), which can convert perovskite into a wide bandgap one-dimensional (1D) perovskite that is mechanically robust and water insoluble. Mixing TPI with perovskite precursor results in a wrapping of perovskite grains with both grain surfaces and grain boundaries converted into several nanometer-thick 1D perovskites during the grain formation process as observed by direct mapping. The grain wrapping passivates the grain boundaries, enhances their resistance to moisture, and reduces the iodine released during light soaking. The perovskite films with wrapped grains are more stable under heat and light. The best device with wrapped grains maintained 92.2% of its highest efficiency after light soaking under 1-sun illumination for 1900 hours at 55°C open-circuit condition.

Topics & Concepts

Grain boundaryPerovskite (structure)Materials scienceGrain sizeMoistureCZTSIodideChemical engineeringBand gapComposite materialCrystallographyOptoelectronicsChemistryInorganic chemistryMicrostructureEngineeringPerovskite Materials and ApplicationsConducting polymers and applications
Perovskite grain wrapping by converting interfaces and grain boundaries into robust and water-insoluble low-dimensional perovskites | Litcius