4.7 Article

Passivation of surface defects in FAPbI3 perovskite by methimazole molecule: A first-principles investigation

Journal

APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 605, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2022.154829

Keywords

Surface defects; Passivation; Methimazole; Perovskite; First-principles

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province
  3. Graduate Innovation Ability Cultivation Funding Project of Hebei Province
  4. [21973025]
  5. [21973027]
  6. [B2019205061]
  7. [B2019205113]
  8. [CXZZBS2021061]

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In this study, the passivation effect and mechanism of methimazole (MMI) molecule on the surface defects of formamidinium lead triiodide (FAPbI(3)) were explored using first-principles calculations. The results showed that MMI molecule could stably adsorb on the FAPbI(3) (001) surface and alleviate the chemical statuses of under-coordinated Pb and I ions, leading to the inhibition of surface defect formation. Additionally, the S atom in MMI molecule could fill the defect states near the band edge or in the bandgap, contributing to defect healing.
There are a large number of defects existing on the surfaces and grain boundaries of perovskite film, which cause the reduction of power conversion efficiency and accelerate the degradation of solar cell devices. Herein, based on the first-principles of density functional theory calculations, we proposed two defect passivation modes, defect-inhibiting mode and defect-healing mode, to explore the passivation effect and mechanism of methimazole (MMI) molecule on the surface defects of formamidinium lead triiodide (FAPbI(3)). Our calculations show that MMI molecule can stably adsorb on the FAPbI(3) (001) surface by forming Pb-S coordination bond and I center dot center dot center dot H hydrogen bond. In the defect-inhibiting mode, the chemical statuses of under-coordinated Pb and I ions on the perovskite surfaces are alleviated by the MMI adsorption, leading to the increase of defect formation energy and thus inhibiting the formation of surface defects. In the defect-healing mode, the S atom in MMI molecule provides its lone pair electrons to fill the defect states introduced by the surface defects, eliminating or reducing the defect states near the band edge or in the bandgap. This study gives a deep understanding for the passivation mechanism of small organic molecule on the surface defects of perovskite and provides an effective strategy of surface passivation for improving the performance of pemvskite solar cells.

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