Chemical Processing of Mixed-Cation Hybrid Perovskites: Stabilizing Effects of Configurational Entropy

Feray Ünlü, Eunhwan Jung, Senol Öz, Heechae Choi, Thomas Fischer, Sanjay Mathur*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In the third-generation solar cells, especially considering cost-effectiveness and facile fabrication, incorporating perovskites as efficient absorbers enabled a breakthrough for emerging photovoltaics. In 2009, starting with power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of 3.9%, they already show a record of 25.5%, reaching almost the power of conventional silicon solar cells. Ideally, perovskites can be represented by the simple building block AMX 3, where M is the metal cation, X is an oxide or halide anion, and A is a cation. The A-site cation is selected to equalize the total charge and to stabilize the lattice and can typically be Cs + or organic cations like CH 3 NH 3+ (MA) and NH 2 CH=NH 2+ (FA). The size of the organic cation and metal ion is an important parameter to modulate the crystal structure and electronic properties of perovskite materials. The first used single-cation hybrid perovskites (MAPbI 3 and MAPbBr 3) showed a lack of thermal and phase stability. Entropic stabilization could be achieved by compositional engineering, especially by combining different organic and inorganic cations at the A-site to obtain mixed-cation perovskites. In this chapter, we focus on the development of these perovskites considering the configurational stability, the tolerance factor concepts for evaluation of stable perovskite compositions, and the development of mixed/multiple-cation perovskite solar cells (PSCs).

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationPerovskite Solar Cells
Subtitle of host publicationMaterials, Processes, and Devices
Publisherwiley
Pages1-31
Number of pages31
ISBN (Electronic)9783527825790
ISBN (Print)9783527347155
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • A-site cation engineering
  • configurational entropy
  • long-term stability
  • organic-inorganic hybrid perovskites

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