Manipulating the Crystallization of Tin Halide Perovskites for Efficient Moisture-to-Electricity Conversion.
Abinash TiwariSumit Kumar SharmaAditya BorahAswani YellaPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Manipulating the crystallization of perovskite in thin films is essential for the fabrication of any thin-film-based devices. Fabricating tin-based perovskite films from solution poses difficulties because tin tends to crystallize faster than the commonly used lead perovskite. To achieve optimal device performance in solar cells, the preferred method involves depositing tin perovskite under inert conditions using dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), which effectively retards the formation of the tin-bromine network, which is crucial for perovskite assembly. We found that under ambient conditions, a DMSO-based tin perovskite salt solution resulted in the formation of a two-phase system, SnBr 4 (DMSO) 2 and MABr, whereas a dimethylformamide-based solution resulted in the formation of vacancy-ordered double perovskite MA 2 SnBr 6 . Humidity is known to solvate MABr to form the solvated ions, and so we used the two-phase system for the application in moisture to electricity conversion. The importance of the presence of the scaffold can be seen with the negligible power output from the vacancy-ordered double perovskite obtained with MA 2 SnBr 6 . We have fabricated a device with two-phase system that can generate an open-circuit potential of 520 mV and a short-circuit current density of 30.625 μA/cm 2 at 85% RH. Also, the device charges a 10 μF capacitor from 150 mV at 51% RH to 500 mV at 85% RH in 6 s at a rate of 52.5 mV/s. Moreover, the output can be scaled by connecting devices in series and parallel configurations. A 527 nm green LED was powered by connecting five devices in series at 75% RH. This indicates a potential for utilizing these moisture-to-electricity conversion devices in powering low-energy requirement devices.