1 research outputs found
Iodine Migration and Degradation of Perovskite Solar Cells Enhanced by Metallic Electrodes
We monitored the
evolution in time of pinhole-free structures based
on FTO/TiO<sub>2</sub>/CH<sub>3</sub>NH<sub>3</sub>PbI<sub>2.6</sub>Cl<sub>0.4</sub> layers, with and without spiro-OMeTAD and counter
electrodes (Ag, Mo/Ag, and Au), aged at 24 °C in a dark nitrogen
atmosphere. In the absence of electrodes, no degradation occurs. While
devices with Au show only a 10% drop in power conversion efficiency,
remaining stable after a further overheating at 70 °C, >90%
is
lost when using Ag, with the process being slower for Mo/Ag. We demonstrate
that iodine is dislocated by the electric field between the electrodes,
and this is an intrinsic cause for electromigration of I<sup>–</sup> from the perovskite until it reaches the anode. The iodine exhaustion
in the perovskite layer is produced when using Ag electrodes, and
AgI is formed. We hypothesize that in the presence of Au the iodine
migration is limited due to the buildup of I<sup>–</sup> negative
space charge accumulated at the perovskite–OMeTAD interface