Identifying dominant recombination mechanisms in perovskite solar cells by measuring the transient ideality factor
Phil Calado, Dan Burkitt, Jizhong Yao, Joel Troughton, Trystan M., Watson, Matt J. Carnie, Andrew M. Telford, Brian C. O'Regan, Jenny Nelson,, Piers R. F. Barnes

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to identify dominant recombination mechanisms in perovskite solar cells by analyzing the transient ideality factor after applying a forward bias, providing insights beyond steady-state measurements.
Contribution
The study develops a novel approach using transient ideality factor measurements to accurately determine recombination mechanisms in perovskite solar cells, accounting for device history and architecture.
Findings
Shockley Read Hall recombination is dominant in the studied devices.
Transient ideality signatures reveal interface and bulk recombination processes.
The method improves understanding of recombination beyond steady-state VOC analysis.
Abstract
The ideality factor determined by measuring the open circuit voltage (VOC) as function of light intensity is often used as a means to identify the dominant recombination mechanism in solar cells. However, applying this Suns-VOC technique to perovskite cells is problematic since the VOC evolves with time in a way which depends on the previously applied bias (Vpre), the light intensity, and the device architecture/processing. Here we show that the dominant recombination mechanism in two structurally similar CH3NH3PbI3 devices containing either mesoporous Al2O3 or TiO2 layers can be identified from the signature of the transient ideality factor following application of a forward bias, Vpre, to the device in the dark. The transient ideality factor, is measured by monitoring the temporal evolution of VOC at different light intensities. The initial values of the transient ideality were…
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