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Stabilized tilted-octahedra halide perovskites inhibit local formation of performance-limiting phases.

Tiarnan A S DohertySatyawan NaganeDominik Józef KubickiYoung-Kwang JungDuncan N JohnstoneAffan N IqbalDengyang GuoKyle FrohnaMohsen DanaieElizabeth M TennysonStuart MacphersonAnna AbfaltererMiguel AnayaYu-Hsien ChiangPhillip CroutFrancesco Simone RuggeriSean M CollinsClare P GreyAron WalshPaul A MidgleySamuel D Stranks
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
Efforts to stabilize photoactive formamidinium (FA)–based halide perovskites for perovskite photovoltaics have focused on the growth of cubic formamidinium lead iodide (α-FAPbI 3 ) phases by empirically alloying with cesium, methylammonium (MA) cations, or both. We show that such stabilized FA-rich perovskites are noncubic and exhibit ~2° octahedral tilting at room temperature. This tilting, resolvable only with the use of local nanostructure characterization techniques, imparts phase stability by frustrating transitions from photoactive to hexagonal phases. Although the bulk phase appears stable when examined macroscopically, heterogeneous cation distributions allow microscopically unstable regions to form; we found that these transitioned to hexagonal polytypes, leading to local trap-assisted performance losses and photoinstabilities. Using surface-bound ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, we engineered an octahedral tilt into pure α-FAPbI 3 thin films without any cation alloying. The templated photoactive FAPbI 3 film was extremely stable against thermal, environmental, and light stressors.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • solar cells
  • quality improvement
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • human health