Abstract
The origin of the low densities of electrically active defects in Pb halide perovskite (HaP), a crucial factor for their use in photovoltaics, light emission, and radiation detection, remains a matter of discussion, in part because of the difficulty in determining these densities. Here, we present a powerful approach to assess the defect densities, based on electric field mapping in working HaP-based solar cells. The minority carrier diffusion lengths were deduced from the electric field profile, measured by electron beam-induced current (EBIC). The EBIC method was used earlier to get the first direct evidence for the n-i-p junction structure, at the heart of efficient HaP-based PV cells, and later by us and others for further HaP studies. This manuscript includes EBIC results on illuminated cell cross sections (in operando) at several light intensities to compare optoelectronic characteristics of different cells made by different groups in several laboratories. We then apply a simple, effective single-level defect model that allows deriving the densities (Nr) of the defect acting as recombination center. We find Nr≈ 1 × 1013cm-3for mixed A cation lead bromide-based HaP films and ∼1 × 1014cm-3for MAPbBr3(Cl). As EBIC photocurrents are similar at the grain bulk and boundaries, we suggest that the defects are at the interfaces with selective contacts rather than in the HaP film. These results are relevant for photovoltaic devices as the EBIC responses distinguish clearly between high- and low-efficiency devices. The most efficient devices have n-i-p structures with a close-to-intrinsic HaP film, and the selective contacts then dictate the electric field strength throughout the HaP absorber.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 34171-34179 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces |
Volume | 14 |
Issue number | 30 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 3 Aug 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
Funding
We thank the Yotam project, Ullmann Family Foundation, Dears Foundation, the WIS’ Sustainability And Energy Research Initiative, SAERI, and the Minerva Centre for Self-Repairing Systems for Energy & Sustainability for support at the Weizmann Institute and the Israel Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure for the work at Bar-Ilan University. A.Z. thanks Katya Rechav for the FIB sample preparation, Ifat Kaplan-Asheri for assisting with EBIC operation, and Isaac Balberg (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) for fruitful discussions.
Funders | Funder number |
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Dears Foundation | |
Israel Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure | |
Minerva Centre for Self-Repairing Systems for Energy & Sustainability | |
SAERI | |
Ullmann Family Foundation | |
Bar-Ilan University |
Keywords
- Br-based perovskite
- EBIC
- defect states
- diffusion length
- p-i-n junction