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Light-activated photocurrent degradation and self-healing in perovskite solar cells

  • Wanyi Nie
  • , Jean Christophe Blancon
  • , Amanda J. Neukirch
  • , Kannatassen Appavoo
  • , Hsinhan Tsai
  • , Manish Chhowalla
  • , Muhammad A. Alam
  • , Matthew Y. Sfeir
  • , Claudine Katan
  • , Jacky Even
  • , Sergei Tretiak
  • , Jared J. Crochet
  • , Gautam Gupta
  • , Aditya D. Mohite
  • United States Department of Energy
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory Theoretical Division
  • Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick
  • Purdue University
  • Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes
  • Institut FOTON - UMR 6082
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

690 Scopus citations

Abstract

Solution-processed organometallic perovskite solar cells have emerged as one of the most promising thin-film photovoltaic technology. However, a key challenge is their lack of stability over prolonged solar irradiation. Few studies have investigated the effect of light soaking on hybrid perovskites and have attributed the degradation in the optoelectronic properties to photochemical or field-assisted ion migration. Here we show that the slow photocurrent degradation in thin-film photovoltaic devices is due to the formation of light-activated meta-stable deep-level trap states. However, the devices can self-heal completely by resting them in the dark for <1 min or the degradation can be completely prevented by operating the devices at 0 °C. We investigate several physical mechanisms to explain the microscopic origin for the formation of these trap states, among which the creation of small polaronic states involving localized cooperative lattice strain and molecular orientations emerges as a credible microscopic mechanism requiring further detailed studies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number11574
JournalNature Communications
Volume7
DOIs
StatePublished - May 16 2016

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