Jian
Kang
a,
Shan
Chen
*b,
Mengmeng
Hao
d,
Junxian
Liu
a,
Mohammad
Al-Mamun
a,
Porun
Liu
a,
Yun
Wang
a,
Huajie
Yin
*c and
Huijun
Zhao
*a
aCentre for Catalysis and Clean Energy, School of Environment and Science, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD 4222, Australia. E-mail: h.zhao@griffith.edu.au
bInstitutes of Physical Science and Information Technology, Anhui University, Hefei, 230039, China. E-mail: chenshan@ahu.edu.cn
cInstitute of Solid-State Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei, 230031, China. E-mail: yinhj@issp.ac.cn
dSchool of Chemical Engineering, Australian Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia
First published on 27th May 2022
The all-inorganic lead-free perovskite CsBi3I10 has recently emerged as a promising light absorber. However, the poor morphology of CsBi3I10 film remains a critical issue for fabricating high-performance solar cells. In this work, we report an ion substitution strategy by alloying Sb into CsBi3I10, resulting in dramatically improved grain crystallinity and markedly reduced bandgaps for better light utilization. The Sb-substituted CsBi3I10 film composed of highly-crystalline large grains can form a bulk-heterojunction structure with the electron acceptor PCBM to facilitate the exciton separation. With PTAA as the hole transport layer, the solar cell assembled using Cs(Bi0.7Sb0.3)3I10 can afford a champion power conversion efficiency of 1.54% with a high Voc of 0.81 V.
Recently, a new type of Bi-based perovskite with the formula of ABi3I10 (A = Cs+, MA+) has been explored as a promising candidate due to its intriguing optoelectronic properties, especially the suitable bandgap of ∼1.77 eV.15–17 In 2016, Johansson's group firstly reported the CsBi3I10 perovskite and its photovoltaic application in the meso-structured device, for which the photocurrent is still observable up to 700 nm and a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 0.4% was achieved.15 Later, several groups have focused their studies on enhancing the PCEs of CsBi3I10 solar cells via improving the film morphologies by adopting various strategies such as composition tuning,18 solvent engineering,19–23 and interface engineering.24 For example, very recently, Zhang's group reported a gas quenching assisted antisolvent method combined with introducing a thiourea Lewis base additive to engineer the film microstructure.22 However, the most reported PCEs of CsBi3I10 solar cells developed using the above-mentioned strategies are around 1% due to suboptimal morphology control. Achieving a high-quality thin film with large crystal grains, uniform coverage and smooth surface remains a big challenge for the CsBi3I10 perovskite, due to its rapid crystallization rate.16,18–22,24–26 It is therefore necessary to explore new strategies capable of modulating the crystallization kinetics (retarding the crystallization rate), to improve the film quality and photovoltaic performance of CsBi3I10.
On the other hand, ion substitution by incorporating appropriate ions into the host lattices has been proven to be an effective strategy to tailor the optoelectronic properties (such as bandgaps, trap states, and charge transport) of various perovskite materials.27–34,38–41 For example, Kanatzidis's group alloyed the Sn2+ into MAPbI3, achieving a narrowed bandgap of <1.3 eV and extending the photoresponse to the infrared region (up to 1050 nm) for the solid solution of MASn1−xPbxI3.35 Notably, the suitable ion substitution can also improve the film morphology of perovskites.31,36,37 For example, Mn2+ ion substituted all-inorganic perovskites CsPb1−xMnxI1+2xBr2−2x thin film, reported by Qi's group, showed better crystallinity and morphology than its undoped counterpart with enhanced photovoltaic performance.31 However, to the best of our knowledge, the ion substitution strategy has yet been applied for the CsBi3I10 system.
In this work, we incorporate the isovalent Sb3+ into the CsBi3I10 perovskite to investigate the crystallization process and film growth of the solid solution of Cs(Bi1−xSbx)3I10 (x = 0 to 0.5) and its photovoltaic performance. Alloying Sb3+ can efficiently retard the crystallization rate of CsBi3I10 perovskite, resulting in a thin film with higher crystallinity and larger grains. The film with an optimal composition of Cs(Bi0.7Sb0.3)3I10 possessing evenly distributed single-layer and large crystal grains is utilized to construct a bulk-heterojunction structure with [6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) electron acceptor to promote the dissociation of excitons. After the optimization of the interface layer, the best performed solar cell achieves a champion PCE of 1.54% with excellent reproductivity.
The effect of Sb-substitution on the crystallization process and film morphology of CsBi3I10 (denoted as CBI) film is firstly investigated. As shown in the upper panel of Fig. 1a, the colour of spin-coated CBI film from a mixture solvent of DMF and DMSO (9:1 v/v) turns to black-brown in less than 30 s upon the thermal annealing treatment at 100 °C, indicating a rapid crystallization process. This rapid crystallization phenomenon for Bi-based perovskites is likely due to the much lower solubility of BiI3 precursor and its weaker coordinating strength with the common Lewis base solvents.38,39 The surface scanning electron microscope (SEM) image (Fig. 1b) indicates that the pristine CBI film is mostly consisted of randomly-oriented ultra-small nanoparticles, due to the fast solvent evaporation during thermal annealing. The Sb3+-substituted CBI films show distinct crystallization behaviour and film morphology. In contrast, the as-obtained spin-coated Cs(Bi0.7Sb0.3)3I10 (denoted as CBSI-3) film takes ∼60 s to fully change the colour from orange to black-brown under the same treatment conditions (Fig. 1a lower panel), reflecting the prolonged crystallization process of the solid solution film. All of the films with Sb-substitution show the similar slowed crystallization trend regardless of substitution ratio. The retarded crystallization might be caused by a stronger coordination of Sb3+ with the Lewis base solvent DMF or DMSO (solvent effect will be discussed in the following part). As shown in Fig. 1c and d and Fig. S1,† the Sb3+-substituted CBI films are consisted of highly-crystallized thick nanoplates with sizes of up to several hundreds of nanometres. The CBSI-3 film with 30 mol% Sb substitution stands out in terms of uniformity, crystallinity, and crystal orientation. Further increasing the substitution ratio (x ≥ 0.5), the film coverage is dramatically reduced probably because of low vaporization temperature of SbI3.40 Unlike the Pb-based perovskites that predominantly generate free charge carriers upon light absorption due to low exciton binding energy of 19–50 meV, Bi/Sb-based perovskites possess high exciton binding energy exceeding 200 meV and usually generate stable excitons.33,42 The CBSI-3 film possesses evenly distributed nanoplates structure that are surrounded with continuous 200 nm-wide gaps (Fig. S2†). This specific morphology is favourable to construct bulk-heterojunction structure when combined with suitable electron acceptors, which can efficiently address the exciton separation issue of Bi-based perovskites.43
Fig. 1e and S3† show the X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of Cs(Bi1−xSbx)3I10 (x = 0 to 0.5) films deposited on the PEDOT substrates. From the pristine CBI to the Cs(Bi0.5Sb0.5)3I10 (denoted as CBSI-5) with increasing the Sb-substitution ratio, the main diffraction peak shifts slightly from 12.85° to 13.05° (Fig. S3b†). The slight shift to higher angels of the main peak can be attributed to the smaller ionic radius of the Sb3+ cation than that of Bi3+, indicating a small change in the lattice parameters and complete mixing of the solid solution. No new peaks appear means no phase transition occurred for all of the Cs(Bi1−xSbx)3I10 thin films even at high substitution ratio (x = 0.5). Among these films, the film with x = 0.3 owns the highest peak intensity (Fig. 1e and S3a†), which states the best crystallization of CBSI-3 film and agrees with SEM results. The presence of the peak at ∼13° can be assigned to the (003) plane, indicating the preferred crystal growth along the c-axis.
The Sb-substitution effect on the surface chemistry of CBI thin films is studied by X-ray photo-electron spectroscopy (XPS). High resolution spectra of Cs 3d, Bi 4f, I 3d, and Sb 3d of the pristine CBI and/or CBSI-3 films are shown in Fig. 2a–d. These two films unveil identical peaks of Cs 3d, Bi 4f and I 3d electronic states, indicating that the Sb-substituted CBSI-3 thin film maintains the similar electronic structure with CBI film. In Fig. 2d, the peaks of CBSI-3 thin film located at 530.4 eV and 539.7 eV correspond to the binding energies of Sb3+ 3d5/2 and Sb3+ 3d3/2, and the peak at 532.5 eV corresponds to O 1s.43 These indicate the presence of antimony in its trivalent form in the solid solution.43,44Fig. 2e and S4† show the absorption spectra of Cs(Bi1−xSbx)3I10 thin films (x = 0 to 0.5). The bandgaps of these films reduce with the Sb contents increasing, consistent with the previous study on MA3(Bi1−xSbx)2I9 system.32,43 The calculated direct (indirect) bandgaps are reduced from 1.88 eV (1.82 eV) for CBI to 1.66 eV (1.57 eV) for CBSI-5 as shown in Fig. S5–S7.† The CBSI-3 film possesses the direct and indirect bandgaps of 1.79 eV and 1.72 eV, respectively. The reduced bandgap of active layer could lead to the widened absorption and the better utilization of light energy.
The Sb-substitution effect on the photovoltaic performance of CBI films is then evaluated by fabricating solar cells with an inverted device architecture (ITO/PEDOT/Cs(Bi1−xSbx)3I10/PCBM/BCP/Ag). All films discussed here are synthesized from DMF/DMSO mixed solvent with volume ratio of 9:1. As shown in Fig. 2f, the CBSI-3 based solar cells exhibit obvious enhancement for the PCE (0.62%) and the open-circuit voltage (Voc, 0.74 V), compared with those (0.45% PCE and 0.47 V Voc) of the pristine CBI based solar cells (Table S1†). The short-circuit current density (Jsc) almost remain the same for CBI and CBSI-3 based devices. The improved performance of CBSI-3 is mainly attributed to the improved crystallinity of perovskite grain. The CBSI-5 based devices perform poorly, possibly due to its low film coverage. This preliminary photovoltaic evaluation combined with the above characterizations indicate that the CBSI-3 possesses the best composition with 30 mol% Sb3+ substitution, which will be adopted in the following study of solvent effect.
The solvent effect on the film growth and the photovoltaic performance is investigated by fabricating CBSI-3 films from 11 solvents with DMSO concentrations of 0% to 100% (10% interval), considering that the retarded crystallization is possibly caused by the stronger coordination between Lewis acid Sb3+ and Lewis base solvent. The UV-vis spectra (Fig. 3a) show the absorption intensity, especially in the 550–800 nm region, gradually increases when increasing the volume ratio of DMSO. SEM images (Fig. 3b, S8 and S9†) show that the introduction of DMSO plays a vital role in promoting the crystal grain growth. The CBSI-3 film synthesized from the pure DMF (DMSO = 0 vol%) is almost amorphous as evidenced by the extremely low-intensity XRD peaks shown in Fig. S10,† while the CBSI-3 films synthesized from DMF/DMSO mixed solvents show distinctive morphologies with large crystal grains sized around several hundreds of nanometres, regardless of the volume ratio of DMSO. The Lewis basicity of the solvents can be quantified by Gutmann's donor number DN, which indicates the coordinating strength of Lewis acid–base complex.45,46 Loo et al. reported that high DN solvent such as DMSO coordinates more strongly with the Pb2+ centre, which in turn inhibits iodide coordination and stalls MAPbI3 perovskite crystallization.45 Here, the higher DN (30.0 kcal mol−1) solvent DMSO (compared to DMF with a DN of 26.6 kcal mol−1) might form a stronger coordination strength with Sb3+ centres, which slows down the CBSI perovskite crystallization and enlarges the grains. It is also notable that the crystal nanoplates for films synthesized from the high DMSO-concentration solvents are single-layered and more separated instead of overlapping or over-aggregating. For the Bi-based perovskites with high exciton binding energy, the separated grains can increase the interfacial contact area between CBSI and PCBM electron acceptor, facilitating the efficient exciton separation and charge transfer, while the aggregated grains might raise more possibilities for recombination at the grain boundaries (Fig. 3c). Steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) were investigated for CSBI-3 films prepared from low-DMSO-contained and high-DMSO-contained solvents, respectively (Fig. S11†). The stronger PL peak intensity (Fig. S11a†) and longer PL lifetime (Fig. S11b†) of film from high-DMSO-contained solvent (100 vol%) indicate the supressed non-radiative recombination in this film and verify the proposed mechanism in Fig. 3c. The photovoltaic performances of CBSI-3 films synthesized from the mixed solvents with different DMSO volume ratios are studied. Fig. 3d and S12† show the corresponding current density–voltage (J–V) curves. The performance of CBSI-3 is enhanced with the increased DMSO volume ratio, which agrees with the UV-vis absorption and morphological results. The device based on CBSI-3 film synthesized by using 100 vol% DMSO as solvent yields a highest PCE of 1.06% (Voc = 0.75 V, Jsc = 4.62 mA cm−2, and fill factor (FF) = 30.7%) under the same experimental conditions. The performance parameters of devices with different DMSO concentrations are summarized in Table S2.†
The Sb-substitution ratio in the CBSI film is further optimized by using pure (100 vol%) DMSO solvent for film preparation. As shown in Fig. 4a, the device based on the pristine CBI without Sb substitution yields a low PCE of 0.55% with a Voc of 0.46 V, a Jsc of 2.89 mA cm−2, and a FF of 41.8%. All of the devices based on the Sb-substituted CBSI films reveal the increased Voc (Table S3†), firstly increasing with the increasing of Sb-substitution (x = 0.1 to 0.3), then reaching a steady point (x = 0.3 to 0.4). The device based on CBSI-3 film with 30 mol% Sb substitution affords the best performance with a highest PCE of 1.06% and Jsc of 4.62 mA cm−2 as discussed in the above section. As illustrated in Fig. S13,† external quantum efficiency (EQE) curves of devices with different Sb contents were measured to confirm the highest Jsc of CBSI-3. In addition, the effect of CBSI-3 precursor solution concentration and post-treatment temperature on the photovoltaic performance is studied (Fig. S14 and S15†). The optimized concentration and thermal annealing temperature are 0.31 M and 100 °C, respectively, which gives the CBSI-3/PCBM bulk-heterojunction active layer a thickness of ∼150 nm (Fig. S16†). Thermal annealing temperature lower than 100 °C would lead to incomplete DMSO evaporation of CBSI-3 films and inferior performance as shown in Fig. S15.† All of the above-investigated devices adopt the most popular commercial PEDOT as hole-transport-layer (HTL). However, PEDOT possesses a low-lying highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) of −5.10 eV compared with that (−5.90 eV) of CsBi3I10.24 This large band offset is not favourable for holes transfer from HOMO of CsBi3I10 to HOMO of PEDOT, causing charge recombination at the interfaces. The PTAA with a deeper-lying HOMO (−5.42 eV) was then employed as the HTL instead of PEDOT to reduce the energy barrier of holes transfer. The CBSI-3 films fabricated onto the ITO/PTAA substrates show similar morphologies compared with those onto the ITO/PEDOT substrates (Fig. S17†). Fig. 4b shows the cross-sectional SEM image of the device based on the low-temperature processed p-i-n structure ITO/PTAA/CBSI-3/PCBM/BCP/Ag. The CBSI-3/PCBM active layer exhibits a typical bulk-heterojunction structure with PCBM permeating into the gaps surrounded by the CBSI-3 grains. As expected, the CBSI-3 solar cell using PTAA HTL outperforms that using PEDOT HTL, with a much improved Voc (0.81 V vs. 0.75 V) and Jsc (5.47 mA cm−2vs. 4.63 mA cm−2) due to the better energy band alignment (Fig. 4c). As shown in Fig. 4d, the champion CBSI-3 solar cell shows a slight hysteresis and achieves a PCE of 1.54% with a Voc of 0.81 V, Jsc of 5.47 mA cm−2 and FF of 34.8% under backward scanning with a scan step of 10 mV. To our best knowledge, this is the highest PCE among all of the reported AB3X10 (A = MA+, FA+, and Cs+; B= Bi3+ or Sb3+; X= I−, Cl−) perovskite solar cells. The integrated Jsc from EQE spectrum for the champion solar cell is 5.21 mA cm−2, which agrees well with the value of 5.47 mA cm−2 from the J–V plot (Fig. 4e). Fig. 4f shows the statistic variations of 40 devices based on the CBSI-3 films synthesized from the solvents with DMSO concentration of 70 vol%, 80 vol%, 90 vol%, and 100 vol% when using PTAA as HTL, and the results confirm the excellent reproducibility. Fig. S18† shows the performance tracking of the champion CBSI-3 solar cell obtained by continuous measuring the J–V curves under standard simulated illumination under ambient conditions, indicating that the device possesses superior stability, with the PCE keeping almost unchanged after 300s’ continuous measurement. The storage and light-soaking stabilities of CBSI-3 solar cells were evaluated (Fig. S19 and S20†). The device can retain 95.1% and 90.2% of initial PCEs when stored in Ar atmosphere for 14 days and under continuous illumination for 7 days, respectively.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ta02245a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |