| Literature DB >> 32046181 |
Guangdong Li1, Xiaoping Zou1, Jin Cheng1, Dan Chen2,3, Yujun Yao1, Chuangchuang Chang1, Xing Yu1, Zixiao Zhou1, Junqi Wang1, Baoyu Liu1.
Abstract
In recent years, flexible perovskite solar cells have drawn tremendous attention in the field of wearable devices, and optimization of perovskite composition plays an important role in improving film quality and photophysical properties. At present, some researchers have only studied A-site organic cations mixing or X-site halide anions mixing in the ABX3 structure of perovskite, but there are few reports on co-mixing of A-site and X-site ions in flexible perovskite solar cells. In this paper, we mainly try to study the effects of different concentrations of mixed formamidine methylamine halide (FAxMA1-xBrxClyI1-x-y) precursor solutions on the quality and photophysical properties of perovskite films under low temperature process. We conclude that the film quality and photophysical properties reached the best results when the optimized precursor solution concentration was 60:6:6. The investigation on composition optimization in this experiment laid the foundation for the improvement of the performance of flexible perovskite solar cells. We also use the results of this experiment to prepare flexible perovskite solar cells based on carbon electrodes, which are expected to be applied in other flexible optoelectronic or electro-optical devices.Entities:
Keywords: film quality; flexible perovskite solar cells; perovskite composition; photophysical properties
Year: 2020 PMID: 32046181 PMCID: PMC7037080 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25030732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1SEM images of perovskite layer prepared with formamidine methylamine halide precursors solutions with concentrations of 40:4:4 (a), 50:5:5 (b), 60:6:6 (c), and 70:7:7 (d), respectively.
Figure 2Normalized XRD patterns of perovskite layers prepared with mixed formamidine methylamine halide precursor solutions at different concentrations.
Figure 3UV–vis absorption spectra of perovskite layers prepared with different concentrations of formamidine methylamine halide precursor solutions.
Figure 4Photoluminescence spectroscopy of perovskite layers prepared with different concentrations of formamidine methylamine halide precursors solutions.
Figure 5(a) Device structure diagram; (b) J–V curves of perovskite solar cells prepared with different concentrations of formamidine methylamine halide precursor solution on ITO substrate.
Performance parameters of perovskite solar cells prepared with different concentrations of formamidine methylamine halide precursor solution.
| Samples | PCE (%) a | Voc (V) b | Jsc (mA/cm2) c | FF (%) d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-for | 3.87 | 0.79 | 15.18 | 32.08 |
| 4-rev | 4.28 | 0.84 | 16.66 | 30.56 |
| 5-for | 5.70 | 0.81 | 18.43 | 38.10 |
| 5-rev | 6.02 | 0.86 | 17.96 | 38.96 |
| 6-for | 7.28 | 0.92 | 20.78 | 38.19 |
| 6-rev | 9.79 | 0.98 | 20.87 | 47.68 |
| 7-for | 6.64 | 0.91 | 20.39 | 35.57 |
| 7-rev | 7.12 | 0.96 | 19.94 | 37.28 |
a Power conversion efficiency; b Open-circuit voltage; c Short-circuit photocurrent density; d Fill factor.
Figure 6J–V curve of flexible perovskite solar cell.
Performance parameters of flexible perovskite solar cell.
| Samples | PCE (%) a | Voc (V) b | Jsc (mA/cm2) c | FF (%) d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-for | 2.60 | 0.76 | 9.92 | 34.52 |
| 1-rev | 3.24 | 0.81 | 9.04 | 44.23 |
a Power conversion efficiency; b Open-circuit voltage; c Short-circuit photocurrent density; d Fill factor.
Figure 7Flexible perovskite solar cell based on carbon electrode.