4.7 Article

Effect of Pristine Graphene on Methylammonium Lead Iodide Films and Implications on Solar Cell Performance

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 4, Issue 12, Pages 13943-13951

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.1c02738

Keywords

hybrid perovskites; graphene; XRD; photostability; ambient stability; impedance spectroscopy; porosity

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PID2020-115514RBI00, MAT2015-65356-C3-2-R, PID2019107314RB-I00]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [724424-No-LIMIT]
  3. AYUDA PUENTE 2020 URJC
  4. Associated Lab LABCADIO
  5. CM
  6. European Social Fund (ESF) under the Talento fellowship [2017-T2/IND-5586]
  7. CM [F660]
  8. Rey Juan Carlos University under action 1, Encouragement of Young Phd students investigation
  9. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under a FPI predoctoral contract [PRE2019-088433]

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The study introduced graphene into hybrid halide perovskite solar cells, finding that low concentrations of graphene can delay film degradation and improve photovoltaic performance and stability, while high concentrations of graphene can be detrimental to device operation. The research proposed that the sealing effect of graphene on perovskite grains may enhance stability, but it could also limit electronic transport and increase the porosity of films for gas penetration.
The relatively low stability of solar cells based on hybrid halide perovskites is the main issue to be solved for the implementation in real life of these extraordinary materials. Degradation is accelerated by temperature, moisture, oxygen, and light and mediated by halide easy hopping. The approach here is to incorporate pristine graphene, which is hydrophobic and impermeable to gases and likely limits ionic diffusion while maintaining adequate electronic conductivity. Low concentrations of few-layer graphene platelets (up to 24 x 10(-3) wt %) were incorporated to MAPbI(3) films for a detailed structural, optical, and transport study whose results are then used to fabricate solar cells with graphene-doped active layers. The lowest graphene content delays the degradation of films with time and light irradiation and leads to enhanced photovoltaic performance and stability of the solar cells, with relative improvement over devices without graphene of 15% in the power conversion efficiency, PCE. A higher graphene content further stabilizes the perovskite films but is detrimental for in-operation devices. A trade-off between the possible sealing effect of the perovskite grains by graphene, that limits ionic diffusion, and the reduction of the crystalline domain size that reduces electronic transport, and, especially, the detected increase of film porosity, that facilitates the access to atmospheric gases, is proposed to be at the origin of the observed trends. This work demonstrated how the synergy between these materials can help to develop cost-effective routes to overcome the stability barrier of metal halide perovskites, introducing active layer design strategies that allow commercialization to take off.

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