Bromine Incorporation Affects Phase Transformations and Thermal Stability of Lead Halide Perovskites.
Diana K LaFolletteJuanita HidalgoOmar AllamJonghee YangAustin ShoemakerRuipeng LiBarry LaiBenjamin J LawrieSergei V KalininCarlo A R PeriniMahshid AhmadiSeung Soon JangJuan Pablo Correa BaenaPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Mixed-cation and mixed-halide lead halide perovskites show great potential for their application in photovoltaics. Many of the high-performance compositions are made of cesium, formamidinium, lead, iodine, and bromine. However, incorporating bromine in iodine-rich compositions and its effects on the thermal stability of the perovskite structure has not been thoroughly studied. In this work, we study how replacing iodine with bromine in the state-of-the-art Cs 0.17 FA 0.83 PbI 3 perovskite composition leads to different dynamics in the phase transformations as a function of temperature. Through a combination of structural characterization, cathodoluminescence mapping, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and first-principles calculations, we reveal that the incorporation of bromine reduces the thermodynamic phase stability of the films and shifts the products of phase transformations. Our results suggest that bromine-driven vacancy formation during high temperature exposure leads to irreversible transformations into PbI 2 , whereas materials with only iodine go through transformations into hexagonal polytypes, such as the 4H-FAPbI 3 phase. This work sheds light on the structural impacts of adding bromine on thermodynamic phase stability and provides new insights into the importance of understanding the complexity of phase transformations and secondary phases in mixed-cation and mixed-halide systems.