| Literature DB >> 31614476 |
Xia Liu1,2,3, Lianzhen Cao4,5,6, Zhen Guo7,8,9, Yingde Li10, Weibo Gao11, Lianqun Zhou12.
Abstract
Perovskite photovoltaic materials (PPMs) have emerged as one of superstar object for applications in photovoltaics due to their excellent properties-such as band-gap tunability, high carrier mobility, high optical gain, astrong nonlinear response-as well as simplicity of their integration with other types of optical and electronic structures. Meanwhile, PPMS and their constructed devices still present many challenges, such as stability, repeatability, and large area fabrication methods and so on. The key issue is: how can PPMs be prepared using an effective way which most of the readers care about. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) technology with high efficiency, controllability, and repeatability has been regarded as a cost-effective road for fabricating high quality perovskites. This paper provides an overview of the recent progress in the synthesis and application of various PPMs via the CVD method. We mainly summarize the influence of different CVD technologies and important experimental parameters (temperature, pressure, growth environment, etc.) on the stabilization, structural design, and performance optimization of PPMS and devices. Furthermore, current challenges in the synthesis and application of PPMS using the CVD method are highlighted with suggested areas for future research.Entities:
Keywords: aerosol assisted CVD; atmospheric pressure CVD; hybrid CVD; low pressure CVD; performance optimization; perovskite photovoltaic nanomaterials; pulsed CVD; solar cells; stabilization; structural design
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614476 PMCID: PMC6829303 DOI: 10.3390/ma12203304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Crystal structure of the perovskite ABX3 form.
Different CVD devices, heating mode and basic schematic diagram 1.
| Device Form | Heating Method (Temperature Range, °C) | Principle Diagram |
|---|---|---|
| Tubular furnace type | Resistance heating mode (~1000) |
|
| Vertical type | Plate heating mode (~500) |
|
| Cylinder type | Induction heating mode (~1200) |
|
| Tandem surround type | Plate heating mode (~500) |
|
1 Referrence [45].
Figure 2Basic reaction diagram of chemical vapor deposition.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of LPCVD instrument. Reproduced with permission from reference [34].
Perovskite materials were synthesized by LPCVD technique.
| Perovskite Material | Pressure | PCE (%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| CH3NH3PbI3 | 1 Torr | 14.99 (Mesoscopic) | [ |
| 15.37 (Planar) | |||
| FAI (Formamidinium iodide) | 2 × 10−2 Pa | 14.2 | [ |
| CH3NH3PbI3 | 1 × 10−3 Pa | 15.6 | [ |
| α-FAPbI3 | 10−2 Pa | 12.4 | [ |
| AMX3 | 10−5–10−6 mbar | ~ | [ |
| CH3NH3PbBrI3-x | 170 Torr | ~ | [ |
| CH3NH3I(MAI) | ~ | 16.42 | [ |
| CH3NH3PbI3 | 10 hPa | ~ | [ |
| CsPbX3 (X = Cl, Br, I) | 4.8(4.8,5.2) Torr | 5.9 (10.0, 8.3) | [ |
| (CH3NH3)3Bi2I9 | 10−6 hPa | 0.047 | [ |
| CH3NH3PbI3 | 104 Pa | ~ | [ |
| CH3NH3PbI3 | 1 Torr | 7.9 | [ |
| CsPbBr3 | 150 Pa | ~ | [ |
| (CH3NH3)3Bi2I9 | 10 hpa | 0.047 | [ |
Figure 4Schematic diagram of the semitransparent PSC using the graphene as top electrode. Reproduced with permission from reference [105].
Summary of the PSCs with graphene and CNTs electrodes.
| Electrode Material | Device Structures | PCE (%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Graphene CNTS | FET/Graphene/TiO2/PCBM/MAPbI3/Spiro-OMeTAD/CNTs | 11.9 | [ |
| Graphene | Quartz/graphene/C60/MAPbI3/carbon | 13.93 | [ |
| Graphene | Glass/graphene/MoO3/PEDOT:PSS/MAPbI3/C60/BCP/LiF/Al | 17.1 | [ |
| Graphene | PET/ZEOCOAT/graphene/P3HT/MAPbI3/PC71BM/Ag | 11.5 | [ |
| Graphene | FTO/TiO2/MAPbI3-xClx/Spiro-OMeTAD/PEDOT:PSS/graphene | 12.37 | [ |
| Graphene | PET/graphene/PEDOT:PSS/MAPbI3/PCBM/Al | 13.94 | [ |
| Graphene | PEN/graphene/MoO3/PEDOT:PSS/MAPbI3/C60/BCP/LiF/Al | 16.8 | [ |
| Graphene | PET/graphene/PEDOT:PSS/FAPbI3−xBrx/PCBM/Al | 17.9 | [ |
| Graphene | Glass or PDMS/graphene/PEDOT:PSS/FAPbI3−xBrx/PCBM/Al | 18.3 | [ |
| Graphene | FTO/TiO2/MAPbI3/Spiro-OMeTAD/graphene | 6.2 | [ |
| Graphene | FTO/TiO2/MAPbI3−xClx/Spiro-OMeTAD/PEDOT:PSS/graphene | 11.8 | [ |
| CNTs | Tifoil/CH3NH3PbI3/TiO2NTs/Spiro-OMeTAD/CNTs | 8.31 | [ |
| CNTs | Glass/FTO/TiO2/CH3NH3PbI3/CNTs | 3.88 | [ |