| Literature DB >> 30487520 |
Peng Gao1,2, Abd Rashid Bin Mohd Yusoff3,4, Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin5.
Abstract
HybridEntities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30487520 PMCID: PMC6261957 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07382-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Dimensionality engineering. Effects of perovskite phase evolution on chemical and physical properties
Photovoltaic performance and stability of 2D-MD-3D perovskites
| Dimensions | Absorber | PCE (%) | PCE ( | Stability test ( | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1D | ||||||
| EA/PA | EAPbI3 | 0.26 | — | 2.2 |
[ | |
| PAPbI3 | 0.016 | — | 2.4 | |||
| 2D | ||||||
| BA/BdA/PEI/PEA | BA2PbI4 | 0.124 | — | 2.3 |
[ | |
| [NH3(CH2)4NH3]PbI4 | 1.08 | — | 2.37 |
[ | ||
| (PEA)2PbBr4 | — | — | 3.0 |
[ | ||
| (PEI)2PbI4 | — | — | 2.3 |
[ | ||
| MD | ||||||
| Class I | ||||||
| BA/MA | (BA)2CsPb2I7 | 4.84 | — | 2.2 |
[ | |
| (BA)2(MA) | 4.02 | — | 1.89 |
[ | ||
| (BA)2(MA) | 11.44 | — | — | — |
[ | |
| (BA)2(MA)3Pb4I13 | 8.79 | 6.8 | 1.65 |
[ | ||
| (BA)2(MA)3Pb4I13 | 12.51 | — | 1.66 |
[ | ||
| (iso-BA)2(MA)3Pb4I13 | 10.63 | 6.43 | 1.74 |
[ | ||
| (BA)2Cs3x(MA)3-3xPb4I13c | 13.68 | — | 1.62 |
[ | ||
| (BA)2(MA)4Pb5I16 | 8.05 | — | 1.6 |
[ | ||
| (BA)2(MA)4Pb5I16 | 8.71 | — | 1.83 |
[ | ||
| HA/MA/FA/Cs | HA2MAPb2I7 | 0.34 | — |
[ | ||
| HA2FAPb2I7 | 1.26 | — |
[ | |||
| HA2CsPb2I7 | 0.10 | — |
[ | |||
| PEI/MA | (PEI)2(MA)6Pb7I22 | 10.08 | — | 1.62 |
[ | |
| PEA/MAd | (PEA)2(MA)2Pb3I10 | 4.73 | — | 2.1 |
[ | |
| (PEA)2(MA)2Pb3I10 | 3.72 | — | 1.94 |
[ | ||
| (PEA)2(MA)9Pb10Br29 | — | — | 2.3 | — |
[ | |
| (PEA)2(MA)49Pb50Br151 | 8.5 | — | 2.2 | — |
[ | |
| (PEA)2(MA)59Pb60I181 | 15.4 | — | — |
[ | ||
| ALAe/Cs/FA | ALA2(MA0.14FA0.81Cs0.05)9Pb10(I0.85Br0.15)29 | 16.5 | — | — |
[ | |
| Class II | ||||||
| PEI/MA | (MAPbI3)1− | 15.2 | — |
[ | ||
| BA/FA/Csf | (BA)0.09(FA0.83Cs0.17)0.91Pb(I0.6Br0.4)3 | 17.2 | 17.3 | 1.72 |
[ | |
| (BA)0.05(FA0.83Cs0.17)0.95Pb(I0.8Br0.2)3 | 20.6 | 19.5 | 1.61 | — |
[ | |
| AVA(3%)/MAf | (AVA)2PbI4/MAPbI3 | 14.6 | — | 1.69 |
[ | |
| (AVA)2PbI4/MAPbI3 module | 10.10 | — |
[ | |||
| IC2H4NH3/MA/FA ion exchangef | (IC2H4NH3)2(MA)x( | 9.03 | — | 1.63 |
[ | |
| Interface/morphology (LPK) | (PEA)1− | 17.71 | 17.3 | 1.522 |
[ | |
| (PEI)2PbI4 /MAPbI3 | 15.37 | — |
[ | |||
| MAPbI3/(PEA)2Pb2I4 3D–2D graded | 19.89 | 19.85 | 1.53 |
[ | ||
| (PEA2PbI4)0.017(MAPbI3) | 19.8 | 17.8 | — |
[ | ||
| MAPbI3/BA2MA2Pb3I10 | 11.49 | — |
[ | |||
| MAPbI3/(PEA)2(MA)4(Pb5I16) | 16.84 | — |
[ | |||
| 2D passivationf | FEAPbI3/MAPbI3 | 17.9 | — |
[ | ||
| BzA-FAPbI3 (benzylammonium) | 19.2 | 19.0 | 1.48 |
[ | ||
| BA-treated MAPbI3 | 19.56 | 19.29 | 1.54 |
[ | ||
| (MA)1−2 | 18.6 | 18.1 | 1.59 |
[ | ||
| NH3I(CH2)8NH3I (C8) | 17.60 | — | — | — |
[ | |
| 3D | ||||||
| Mono-ions | ||||||
| FAPbl3 | 13.24 | — | 1.48 |
[ | ||
| MAPbI3 | 16.1 | — | 1.56 |
[ | ||
| CsPbI3 | 1.8 | 5.6 | 1.73 |
[ | ||
| MAPbBr3 | 8.1 | — | 2.2 |
[ | ||
| Mixed-ions | ||||||
| FA1− | 20.65 | — | — |
[ | ||
| CsFAMAPbI3− | 20.4 | 20.5 | — |
[ | ||
| RbCsFAMAPbI3 | 21.8 | 21.6 | — |
[ | ||
| CsPbI2Br | 7.7 | 6.7 | — |
[ | ||
| CsPb0.9Sn0.1IBr2 | 11.33 | — | 1.79 |
[ |
aStabilized power output under non-operating conditions
bThe time span to 80% of the post burn-in decay (T80), obtained under different lifetime test conditions
cx = 0.05
dQuasi-3D with large n value
eAllylammonium
fNo observable new/alien phase
g4 min. dipping time
Fig. 2Cation dependence of the crystal structure of perovskite and the quantum confinement effect. a 3D networks of CH3NH3PbI3; b 1D chains of CH3CH2NH3PbI3; c 1D chain-structure of CH3(CH2)2NH3PbI3; d 2D layer-structure of CH3(CH2)3NH3PbI3. e Schematic MDP structure and possible energy-level schemes that can arise within these structures, where semiconducting inorganic sheets alternate with organic layers having much wider bandgaps, resulting in a Type I quantum well structure. UV−visible absorption spectra or Tauc plot of f MAPbI3, EAPbI3, and PAPbI3 (Reproduced with permission from ref. [88]); g (BA)2(MA)PbI3 perovskites (for n =1, 2, 3, 4, ∞) (Reproduced with permission from ref. [13])
Fig. 3Vertically grown Class I MDPs via different methods. a Immediate deposition on the hot substrate; b deposited via ‘pre-crystallization annealing’; c deposited with NH4SCN-modified precursor solution. d The resulted MDP films provide direct pathways for charge carriers
Fig. 4Structure characteristics and device performances of most recent research on MDP and the related PSCs. Data composed based on Table 1 (blue background: Class I MDP; orange background: Class II MDP, asterisk: bromide perovskite)
Fig. 5Performance versus n values and bandgaps in MDP. a Device performance as a function of n value. (Reproduced with permission from ref. [34]) b Device performance as a function of bandgaps. (Plotted with data in Table 1, blue background: Class I MDP; orange background: Class II MDP)
Fig. 6Schematic representation of the two proposed mechanisms to form Class II MDP. a, b 2D/3D hybrid mode[53–55]; c Interface passivation mode[40,56,57]
Fig. 7Degradation analysis of a PSC device and the influence of MDP strategy. a Examples of intrinsic and extrinsic degradation mechanisms that lead to device failure at different timescales on a fresh hybrid perovskite device. b Energetics of perovskite formation and stability. Unit cell structure of (PEA)2(MA)PbI3 perovskites with different n values, showing the evolution of dimensionality from 2D (n = 1) to 3D (n = ∞) (Reproduced with permission from ref. [34]); c DFT simulation of the decomposition lifetime with different n values in different atmospheres (Reproduced with permission from ref. [34]; d Summary of stability test results. Data composed based on Table 1. (red dot: 1D and 2D perovskite; green dot: MDP; blue dot: 3D perovskite; each spot represents one residual PCE after certain test time span under one stability test condition)