What Is Moving in Hybrid Halide Perovskite Solar Cells?

DEVICES POLARIZATION METHYLAMMONIUM LEAD IODIDE CH3NH3PBI3 PEROVSKITE Chemistry, Multidisciplinary FOS: Physical sciences 02 engineering and technology 7. Clean energy Halogens Solar Energy INORGANIC PEROVSKITES ORGANIC CATIONS TEMPERATURE Titanium Condensed Matter - Materials Science Multidisciplinary Science & Technology SENSITIZERS Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) Oxides General Chemistry CHARGE-CARRIERS Calcium Compounds Chemistry Physical Sciences PHASE-TRANSITIONS 03 Chemical Sciences 0210 nano-technology Powder Diffraction
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.5b00431 Publication Date: 2016-02-09T21:17:24Z
ABSTRACT
Organic-inorganic semiconductors, which adopt the perovskite crystal structure, have perturbed the landscape of contemporary photovoltaics research. In this Account, we discuss the internal motion of methylammonium lead iodide (CH$_3$NH$_3$PbI$_3$) and formamidinium lead iodide ([CH(NH$_2$)$_2$]PbI$_3$), covering: (i) molecular rotation-libration in the cuboctahedral cavity; (ii) drift and diffusion of large electron and hole polarons; (iii) transport of charged ionic defects. These processes give rise to a range of properties that are unconventional for photovoltaic materials, including frequency-dependent permittivity, low electron-hole recombination rates, and current-voltage hysteresis. Multi-scale simulations - drawing from electronic structure, ab initio molecular dynamic and Monte Carlo techniques - have been combined with neutron scattering and ultra-fast vibrational spectroscopy to qualify the nature and timescales of the motions. Recent experimental evidence and theoretical models for simultaneous electron transport and ion transport in these materials has been presented, suggesting they are mixed-mode conductors with similarities to metal oxide perovskites developed for battery and fuel cell applications. We expound on the implications of these effects for the photovoltaic action. The temporal behaviour found in hybrid perovskites introduces a sensitivity in materials characterisation to the time and length scale of the measurement, as well as the history of each sample. It also poses significant challenges for accurate materials and device simulations. Herein, we critically discuss the atomistic origin of the dynamic processes.<br/>29 pages, 3 figures<br/>
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