Two critical limitations of organic-inorganic lead halide perovskite
materials for solar cells are their poor stability in humid environments and
inclusion of toxic lead. In this study, high-throughput density functional
theory (DFT) methods are used to computationally model and screen 1845 halide
perovskites in search of new materials without these limitations that are
promising for solar cell applications. This study focuses on finding materials
that are comprised of nontoxic elements, stable in a humid operating
environment, and have an optimal bandgap for one of single junction, tandem
Si-perovskite, or quantum dot-based solar cells. Single junction materials are
also screened on predicted single junction photovoltaic (PV) efficiencies
exceeding 22.7%, which is the current highest reported PV efficiency for halide
perovskites. Generally, these methods qualitatively reproduce the properties of
known promising nontoxic halide perovskites that have either been
experimentally evaluated or predicted from theory. From a set of 1845
materials, 15 materials pass all screening criteria for single junction cell
applications, 13 of which have not been previously investigated, such as
(CH3NH3)0.75Cs0.25SnI3, ((NH2)2CH)Ag0.5Sb0.5Br3, CsMn0.875Fe0.125I3,
((CH3)2NH2)Ag0.5Bi0.5I3, and ((NH2)2CH)0.5Rb0.5SnI3. These materials, together
with others predicted in this study, may be promising candidate materials for
stable, highly efficient, and non-toxic perovskite-based solar cells