Multimodal operando microscopy reveals that interfacial chemistry and nanoscale performance disorder dictate perovskite solar cell stability
Kyle Frohna, Cullen Chosy, Amran Al-Ashouri, Florian Scheler, Yu-Hsien, Chiang, Milos Dubajic, Julia E. Parker, Jessica M. Walker, Lea Zimmermann,, Thomas A. Selby, Yang Lu, Bart Roose, Steve Albrecht, Miguel Anaya, Samuel D., Stranks

TL;DR
This study uses multimodal operando microscopy to analyze nanoscale interfacial chemistry and performance disorder in perovskite solar cells, revealing key factors influencing their stability and guiding future improvements.
Contribution
It introduces a multimodal operando microscopy toolkit for in-situ analysis of perovskite solar cells, uncovering the impact of interfacial chemistry and nanoscale heterogeneity on device stability.
Findings
Lower initial heterogeneity correlates with higher performance.
Subtle compositional changes affect local disorder and stress resilience.
Interface modifications can improve performance but may cause nanoscale degradation.
Abstract
Next-generation low-cost semiconductors such as halide perovskites exhibit optoelectronic properties dominated by nanoscale variations in their structure, composition and photophysics. While microscopy provides a proxy for ultimate device function, past works have focused on neat thin-films on insulating substrates, missing crucial information about charge extraction losses and recombination losses introduced by transport layers. Here we use a multimodal operando microscopy toolkit to measure nanoscale current-voltage curves, recombination losses and chemical composition in an array of state-of-the-art perovskite solar cells before and after extended operational stress. We apply this toolkit to the same scan areas before and after extended operation to reveal that devices with the highest performance have the lowest initial performance spatial heterogeneity - a crucial link that is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPerovskite Materials and Applications · Conducting polymers and applications · Chalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films
