4.6 Article

Photoinduced degradation of methylammonium lead triiodide perovskite semiconductors

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 4, Issue 41, Pages 15896-15903

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6ta06497c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cluster of Excellence Engineering of Advanced Materials (EAM)
  2. DFG research training group at Erlangen University [GRK 1896]
  3. Helmholtz-Institute Erlangen Nurnberg (HI-ERN) [DBF01253]
  4. Aufbruch Bayern initiative of the state of Bavaria (EnCN and Solar Factory of the Future)
  5. Bavarian Initiative Solar Technologies go Hybrid (SolTech)
  6. Solar Factory of the Future with the Energy Campus Nurnberg (EnCN)
  7. China Scholarship Council (CSC)

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Photoinduced degradation is a critical obstacle for the real application of novel semiconductors for photovoltaic applications. In this paper, the photoinduced degradation of CH3NH3PbI3 in a vacuum and air (relative humidity 40%) is analyzed by ex situ and advanced in situ technologies. Without light illumination, CH3NH3PbI3 films slowly degrade under vacuum and air within 24 hours. However, we find that CH3NH3PbI3 converts to metallic lead (Pb-0) when exposed to vacuum and light illumination. Further, a series of lead salts (e.g. PbO, Pb(OH)(2) and PbCO3) are formed when CH3NH3PbI3 is degraded under environmental conditions, i.e. under the combination of light, oxygen and moisture. Photoinduced degradation is found to be determined by the environmental atmosphere as CH3NH3PbI3 films remain very stable under nitrogen conditions. The results from vacuum conditions underpin that the high volatility of the organic component (CH3NH3I) is in conflict with reaching excellent intrinsic stability due to its role in creating ion vacancies. The degradation in air suggests that both oxygen and water contribute to the fast photodecomposition of CH3NH3PbI3 into lead salts rather than water alone. Given these basic yet fundamental understandings, the design of hydrophobic capping layers becomes one prerequisite towards long-term stable perovskite-based devices.

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