Rebecca A.
Belisle
a,
William H.
Nguyen
a,
Andrea R.
Bowring
a,
Philip
Calado
b,
Xiaoe
Li
b,
Stuart J. C.
Irvine
c,
Michael D.
McGehee
a,
Piers R. F.
Barnes
*b and
Brian C.
O'Regan
*d
aDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Stanford University, 476 Lomita Mall, Stanford, California 94305, USA
bDepartment of Physics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK. E-mail: piers.barnes@imperial.ac.uk
cCentre for Solar Energy Research, Swansea University, Swansea LL17 OJD, UK
dSunlight Scientific, Berkeley, CA, USA. E-mail: bor@borski.demon.co.uk
First published on 21st December 2016
In Methyl Ammonium Lead Iodide (MAPI) perovskite solar cells, screening of the built-in field by mobile ions has been proposed as part of the cause of the large hysteresis observed in the current/voltage scans in many cells. We show that photocurrent transients measured immediately (e.g. 100 μs) after a voltage step can provide direct evidence that this field screening exists. Just after a step to forward bias, the photocurrent transients are reversed in sign (i.e. inverted), and the magnitude of the inverted transients can be used to find an upper bound on the width of the space charge layers adjacent to the electrodes. This in turn provides a lower bound on the mobile charge concentration, which we find to be ≳1 × 1017 cm−3. Using a new photocurrent transient experiment, we show that the space charge layer thickness remains approximately constant as a function of bias, as expected for mobile ions in a solid electrolyte. We also discuss additional characteristics of the inverted photocurrent transients that imply either an unusually stable deep trapping, or a photo effect on the mobile ion conductivity.
Broader contextOver just five years, organic lead halide perovskite solar cells have reached impressive certified efficiencies (19%) on 1 cm2 devices. On the other hand, these materials appear to be the antithesis of the paradigm photovoltaic absorbers, e.g. silicon. Unlike “rock hard” silicon, the perovskite material is quite loosely bound together. For example it can be formed from solutions of its constituents at temperatures near 100 °C, and is not stable at high temperatures or when exposed to water vapor. More over, it appears that some constituents can rotate freely inside the lattice cage (e.g. methylammonium) and that others can move rapidly through the lattice (e.g. iodide and/or iodide vacancy defects). At first glance, these characteristics would seem to be deadly to photovoltaic efficiency; defects are normally fast recombination centers and mobile ions will screen any electric fields built into the device by intentional doping or the contacts. Not to mention that, by Murphy's law, atoms sloshing back and forth should end up in the least favorable places. From this point of view, we and others are driven to ask “what makes it possible for this material to work as well as it does”. We hope that deeper understanding of this peculiar electronic material will not only allow the development of more efficient, less expensive, solar cells but also provide new paradigms for materials in other branches of electronic materials science. |
Mobile ions are thought to be responsible for the large hysteresis seen in the current voltage scans of some cells.6,9–12 On the other hand, it has been proposed that ion movement alone is not sufficient to cause hysteresis,13 and that passivation of recombination sites, and/or other techniques can remove the hysteresis, presumably without removing the mobile ions.14–16 In some cases, “hysteresis free” cells show strong hysteresis at low temperature or in the initial JVs.17,18 Moving ions may also play a role in the degradation of the cell material, though reported stability of the perovskite cells is steadily improving.12,19
Many techniques have been used to gain insight into the possible ion motion, and it's effect on cell efficiency.11,12,18,20–26 Although a good case for interstitial iodide migration, or iodide vacancy migration is developing,27 it is important to keep in mind that other ions or charged defects may also be moving. Also, the spatial distribution of deeply trapped electronic charges may change with time, screening or enhancing the effect of the mobile ions.
The first order effect of any mobile ions is the screening of the built-in electric field towards the edges of the absorber layer. There is a simple model of the field screening that has been proposed by several authors.7,11,28–30 This model was originally proposed to explain the observation of large hysteresis in the current voltage (JV) characteristics of MAPI cells. The model is illustrated in Scheme 1. Scheme 1a shows the hypothetical charge distribution and band edge energy profiles for a MAPI cell with mobile ions, a short time after the electrodes have been deposited. The figure shows the time at which electrons have flowed from the FTO to the gold to equilibrate the Fermi level across the device, but before any ion drift has occurred. At longer times after the electrodes have been deposited, mobile ions will drift in the electric field established by the charges on the contacts. This drift is shown by the blue circled charges. Mobile ions will continue to drift until equilibrium, where drift and diffusion are equal but opposite at all points. At equilibrium, the mobile ions will screen the electric field to the edges of the absorber layer, as shown in Scheme 1b. For simplicity we have assumed both positive and negative mobile charges in drawing Scheme 1, and we have assumed equal screening lengths (space charge layer widths) at each electrode. The data we present below are consistent with symmetric or asymmetric space charge layers, as long as the layers on both sides are thin relative to the absorber layer thickness (Fig. S1, ESI†).31
The screening of the built-in field at short circuit will result in three regions of the cell. Regions I and III, where there is a net ionic charge and band bending, and region II, where there is no charge and the potential is constant. The width of regions I and III, the space charge layers, will depend on the mobile ion concentration. For visibility we have drawn wide space charge layers (∼10% of the cell thickness). Some cells show significantly thinner space charge layers. Scheme 1b also shows the results of a short pulse of illumination on the cell at short circuit. Absorbed photons will create free electrons and holes in the bands, which will drift in regions I and III, and diffuse in region II, creating a negative photocurrent transient. In our sign convention we consider electrons flowing out of the FTO to the circuit to be a negative current. This is consistent with the standard sign convention for JVs, where the steady state photocurrent is negative. In Scheme 1b we are assuming a short enough pulse of light (e.g. 10 μs) that there is no significant ion movement during the pulse. In the situation depicted in Scheme 1b the steady state photocurrent will be reduced if charge recombination losses during diffusion across region II are significant.
Scheme 1c shows the potential profiles across a cell just after various forward bias voltages are applied to a cell previously equilibrated without bias in the dark. Because of the shapes of the energy bands in Scheme 1c we refer to this model as the “wiggly band” model. Scheme 1c shows the potential profile ≤100 μs after the bias voltage has been applied. That is, after the electrode capacitive charging has occurred, but before any ions have moved. As shown in Scheme 1c, at forward bias there will be a large region of the cell (region II) where the internal potential gradient goes in the opposite direction to the original built-in potential. This will be true even at low applied potentials, e.g. at 0.2 V, shown in blue in Scheme 1c. We refer to the voltage drop across region II as VII. Note that when the space charge layers are thin compared to the absorber thickness (as drawn) the width of region II (WII) does not change much with applied voltage. Thus, under these conditions, the initial magnitude of VII is an approximately constant fraction of the applied voltage. As drawn, the space charge layers are ∼10% of the absorber thickness, therefore just after a forward bias is applied, the magnitude of VII will be ∼80% of the applied potential. The proportion of VII will increase if the space charge layers are thinner.
Scheme 1d shows the effect of a pulse of light on a cell ∼100 μs after a voltage step to 0.8 V forward bias. In the center of the cell, region II, the band edge energy profiles cause free electrons to flow to the right and free holes to flow to the left. Namely, in the opposite direction that they flow in Scheme 1b. As the electrons move to the right inside the absorber layer they will collect in the conduction band edge valley at the right side. The holes will collect in the valence band edge peak. (For simplicity we will henceforth use the term “band valleys” to include both of these charge collection areas.) Even if the photo-generated charges do not reach the electrodes, they will create an equivalent “displacement current” in the external circuit, in the same direction. If region II creates more photocurrent than regions I and III, the result will be measured as a positive photocurrent transient, i.e. of the opposite sign to the steady state photocurrent and short circuit photocurrent transients.
Displacement current is well known from time-of-flight photocurrent experiments.32 Briefly, as the electrons and holes separate, they create a change in the internal electric field, which decreases the potential difference across region II of the cell. Since the electrodes are held at a fixed potential difference, charge will have to flow from the electrodes through the external circuit to keep the total potential difference constant. Another way to understand the displacement current is to view each band valley and the nearby contact as a flat plate capacitor with, initially, ionic charge on the MAPI side, and electronic charge on the electrode. During a light pulse, as electrons flow toward region III they neutralize the charge of the positive ions. A symmetrical process occurs for holes. Electrons will then move from the Spiro through the external circuit to the FTO in order to maintain charge neutrality on each capacitor.
If a given bias is applied to the cell for more than a few 100 μs, the mobile ions will begin to re-equilibrate to the new potential profile. If the bias is applied for sufficiently long time (10–100 seconds) the mobile charges will again screen all the electric field to the edge of the absorber layer (Scheme 3). We return to this re-equilibration process later.
One caveat must be discussed. The model as presented in Scheme 1 is one dimensional. However, experimentally, there is significant lateral variation in the luminescence and other cell characteristics.33–35 The mobile ion concentration, and thus the screening length, could also be different in different places. Despite this oversimplification, the one dimensional model can explain most of our observations below. Some possible exceptions are briefly considered in the Discussion section.
Previous results from several different experiments have supported the qualitative correctness of the wiggly band model.11,18,36–38 For example switchable photocurrents can be created in symmetric lateral films, and also in hole contact only vertical cells, by poling the ions in a given direction.20,28 Also, the JV characteristics have been shown to be a function of the preconditioning voltage in a way that is consistent with the charge screening shown in Scheme 1. Recent cross sectional Kelvin probe microscopy has shown changes in charge distribution at Voc consistent with ion motion.21 Simulation efforts have shown the wiggly band model to be consistent with the observed JV hysteresis,39 though some simulations indicate significant surface recombination must also be present.13,31
However, there is not yet a simple, unambiguous, non-invasive technique to determine the existence, extent, and temporal evolution of region II in working solar cells of the standard configurations. We show herein that a variety of experiments based on photocurrent transients as a function of applied bias and time can be used to show conclusively that the wiggly band model is qualitatively correct, and that region II occupies ≥80% of the absorber layer thickness in two different MAPI cell architectures. We have briefly shown the utility of photocurrent transients at applied bias on MAPI cells in our recent publication on ion movement in perovskite cells without hysteresis.31 Photocurrent transients at applied bias have also been reported in one other previous article.40 The results in that paper also corroborate the wiggly band model, though the authors reach some conclusions which differ from ours. The new experiments we present below can also be used to measure changes in the electric potential profile with time and to examine the effects of light on mobile ions and charge trapping.
Cells were fabricated using variations of literature methods. 4 M HCl (Fisher, A144-212) and Zn powder (J.T. Baker, 4282-01) were used to chemically etch and pattern Pilkington TEC7 FTO glass. Etched substrates were cleaned via subsequent ultrasonication in Extran solution (EMD, EX0996-1), washing with DI water, and ultrasonication in acetone (EMD, AX0115-1) and isopropanol (EMD, PX1835P-4). Dried substrates were subjected to UV-ozone for 15 minutes and moved to a 500 °C hotplate for spray pyrolysis. A 1:10 solution of titanium diisopropoxide bis(acetylacetonate) (Aldrich – 325252) to ethanol (Sigma-Aldrich, 187380) was prepared and deposited with an airbrush to form a compact layer of TiO2. Mesoporous TiO2 substrates were fabricated by spin coating a 1:5 mixture of TiO2 paste diluted in ethanol onto the compact TiO2 substrates and sintered.
The perovskite layer was then deposited on both planar and mesoporous TiO2 substrates as described elsewhere in the literature with a few key modifications.10,41,42 Substrates were cleaned via UV-ozone treatment for 30 minutes prior to deposition. In a dry, oxygen glovebox, a 0.2 M PbCl2/0.8 M PbI2 (source: TCI) solution in dry DMF (source: Acros) was spin-coated onto the substrates (2000 rpm, 2000 rpm s−1 ramp rate, 3 minutes), followed by drying on a hotplate for 15 minutes at 110 °C. The yellow films were then brought out into ambient air to be placed in a glass vacuum chamber containing approximately 1 g of methylammonium iodide (MAI) (source: TCI) at the bottom. The films were placed vertically standing on a perforated glass disc approximately 2 inches above the bottom of the chamber. The chamber was evacuated to a vacuum level of 0.2 Torr and heated to 120 °C for 4 hours. The resulting dark brown films were transferred back into a dry, oxygen glovebox, where they were rinsed in dry isopropanol (source: Acros) for 5 seconds, and spun dry (2000 rpm, 2000 rpm s−1, 30 s). The HTM layer was then deposited via spin coating (4000 rpm, 4000 rpm s−1, 45 s). The formulation of the HTM was: 7 mM spiro(TFSI)2 (source: synthesized as previously described), 52 mM spiroOMeTAD (source: Lumtec), 0.2 mM tBP (source: Sigma Aldrich, additionally distilled upon receiving).41 Gold electrodes were thermally evaporated. We also tested additional m-TiO2/MAPI/Spiro cells made by a one step recipe, and one m-TiO2/MAPbBr3/Spiro cell (see ESI†).
Transients and JVs were taken on a custom built TRACER system. The TRACER is a flexible multi-experiment light and voltage controller using LED lights, MOSFET switches, and custom software running in the IGOR™ control and analysis environment.43 Light was provided by a selection of white, blue, green, red, or NIR (735 nm) LEDs. LED intensity was controlled by two separate GPIB controllable power supplies. LEDs were switched on and off by MOSFET switches with <50 ns on/off times. The LEDs had ≤50 ns off times, and rise times of 1 or 2 μs. Switch control and cell voltage was supplied by a National Instruments USB-6251 DAQ board which has 16 bit resolution and 0.8 μs per point A/D conversion. The USB-6251 voltage supply to the cell has a nominal slew rate of 20 V μs−1, so switching times of ±1 V were sub microsecond. Low capacitance MOSFETs (<10 pF) were used to switch the cell between open and short circuit and to dis/connect the voltage supply. JV's taken with the TRACER use white LEDs as a light source. Because of the large spectral mismatch (the white LEDs cut off at 720 nm on the red side) these are not “calibrated” one sun measurements. We do not calculate energy efficiencies using this light source. Periodically we adjust the intensity of the white LEDs so that a given cell gives the same photocurrent under the white LEDs and a calibrated solar simulator.
The first photocurrent transient experiment shown below we refer to as “Step-Dwell-Probe” (SDP). SDP uses the voltage and light sequence show in Scheme 2a. Cells are allowed to equilibrate at short circuit in the dark for at least one minute. The voltage applied to the cell is then switched to a given value, usually to forward bias. After a given dwell time, from 20 μs to ≥20 seconds, a square wave pulse of light is applied. The length pulse is usually 8 μs, but can be varied from ∼4 μs to continuous. The photocurrent resulting from the pulse of light is recorded using a 2 or 10 ohm measuring resistor. A white light background can be added and removed at any time point in the experiment. A more complex photocurrent transient experiment is based on Scheme 2b. For pedagogical reasons we describe the experiment in full at the point where the data is introduced.
In Fig. 1a we show current–voltage (JV) scans of a planar FTO/c-TiO2/MAPI/Spiro/Gold cell at two scan speeds. The cell was first allowed to stabilize under one sun, at short circuit, during which time the photocurrent grew from ∼10 mA cm−2 to a plateau of 16 mA cm−2 in ∼10 seconds (Fig. S2, ESI†). The JVs were then scanned from near short circuit (SC) to forward bias and return. Hysteresis in this cell at scan speeds of 0.2 V s−1 and 2 V s−1 is large, indicating that there are processes that change the internal quantum efficiency of the cell at timescales of <1 second to ≥10 seconds.
Fig. 1 (a and c) JVs of planar and mesoporous MAPI cells at 1 Sun and dark. The red dot is the stabilized current at a fixed voltage of 0.85 V. (b and d) Photocurrent transients from the Step-Dwell-Probe (SDP) experiment at short circuit (0 V) and various forward bias voltages. Pulse was 8 μs long, from a 735 nm LED. Cells equilibrated for ≥1 minute at dark short circuit between SDP experiments. Although the photocurrent in (b) did not reach a plateau during the 8 μs pulse, longer pulse data shows the plateau occurs by ∼12 μs with only 5% higher current (Fig. S3a, ESI†). |
In Fig. 1b we show the photocurrent transients at various forward bias voltages for the same cell. The transients were taken 100 μs after the voltage step to forward bias (see Scheme 2a). The pulse light source was a 735 nm LED and the pulse length was 8 μs. At short circuit (black) the photocurrent transient is negative, with a peak of −2 mA cm−2. At an applied forward bias of 0.25 V the photocurrent transient is positive, with a magnitude of 1 mA cm−2. At ≥0.4 V, the transient photocurrent reaches +3 mA cm−2, larger in magnitude than the negative transient at short circuit. Fig. 1c shows JVs for a FTO/c-TiO2/m-TiO2/MAPI/Spiro/Gold cell. This cell shows significantly less JV hysteresis than the planar cell in Fig. 1a and b. Fig. 1d shows the photocurrent transients measured as in Fig. 1b. Again, at ≥0.3 V forward bias the photocurrent transients are positive, and at ≥0.6 V they are significantly larger in magnitude than the short circuit photocurrent transient. (We note that the rise and fall of the photocurrent transients in our cells is RC limited. The slower rise and fall for the planar cell results mainly from a larger series resistance for this particular cell.)
Fig. 2 shows a summary of the data from the experiments shown in Fig. 1b and d. In Fig. 2 we have plotted the transient photocurrent at 6 μs into the pulse (dotted line in Fig. 1b and d) vs. the applied voltage. Hereafter we will refer to the complete photocurrent transient as the “Jtr” and the current at a particular time “t” after the start of the pulse as Jtr-t, e.g. Jtr-6μs. The data in Fig. 2 are representative of the four planar TiO2/MAPI cells, three mesoporous TiO2/MAPI cells, and one MAPbBr cell that we have tested. We have recently shown that some “top cathode” MAPI cells with PEDOT and PCBM contact layers also show positive photocurrent transients after a step to forward bias.31 The similarity between the m-TiO2 and planar cell in Fig. 2 might seem unusual given the large difference in the hysteresis shown in Fig. 1. However, because of the short dwell time, the data in Fig. 2 reflect the state of the cell at SC in the dark, whereas the JV hysteresis is a result of how that state evolves at longer times under applied bias.
Fig. 2 Results for the SDP experiment on two MAPI cells. Jtr-6μs after a dwell time of 100 μs vs. dwell voltage. |
Fig. 1 and 2 confirm the wiggly band model shown in Scheme 1. The positive photocurrent transients at 0.3 V forward bias, which is quite small compared to Vbi, are exactly as predicted from Scheme 1c and d. The fact that it requires ≤0.3 V forward bias to create a positive Jtr, implies that region II in Scheme 1c occupies most of the MAPI thickness. In other words the mobile ion screening of the built-in field at SC results in thin space charge layers. (We note again that we are using “mobile ion” as shorthand for all types of polarizable charged defects and dipoles.)
WII/Wa ≥ (Jtr-max − Jtr-p)/(2Jtr-max) | (1) |
We digress here briefly to discuss the similarity in the width of region II in both kinds of cells. The mesoporous TiO2 layer is approximately 250 nm thick, thus occupying about 2/3 of the MAPI layer thickness. Thus for a WII occupying 90% of the cell, most of the m-TiO2/MAPI layer lies inside region II. This implies the following picture of the cell. At short circuit, ions are able to move in the MAPI inside the m-TiO2 as well as in the capping layer. The moving ions screen the built-in field down to the last part of the m-TiO2/MAPI layer near the compact TiO2 underlayer. Because the m-TiO2 is close to intrinsic, there are too few free electrons or holes to have any effect on the field distribution. Thus there is also no field in the TiO2 except in the bottom ≤17 nm. The space charge layer thickness in the m-TiO2 film is controlled by the characteristics of the MAPI, however the high surface area of m-TiO2 layer could have an indirect effect on the concentration and/or mobility of the mobile ions in the MAPI.
Just after the m-TiO2 cell is placed in forward bias, the situation in both types of cells resembles that drawn in Scheme 1c and d. One important difference is that in the m-TiO2/MAPI cell photoexcited electrons may transfer to the m-TiO2. However, in region II electrons in the m-TiO2 will drift away from the c-TiO2 contact, just as they do in the MAPI in the planar cell. The electrons may not be able to reach the MAPI conduction band valley near the Spiro, but the difference in the resulting displacement current will not be large when the capping layer is thin. For this reason the results in Fig. 1 and 2 are similar for both types of cells. More detailed measurements with differing capping layers may be able to distinguish between the two types of cells.
Scheme 3 (a and b) Hypothesized evolution of the band energy profiles under forward bias due to the re-equilibration of mobile ions. Jdark and Jdisp as in Scheme 1. (c and d) Band energy profiles in the Step-Dwell-Step-Probe (SDSP) experiment. Only conduction band shown, vertical scale double that of panel a and b. (c) Showing the hypothesized change in band energy profile after ∼1 ms at 0.8 V and then the further change caused by a step to Vpr = 0.6 or 0.3 V. (d) Comparison of the band energy profiles after a step from 0 V to 0.3 V, and after a step back to 0.3 V after ∼1 ms at 0.8 V. |
Fig. 3 (a) Photocurrent transients from the SDP experiment for a dwell voltage of 0.8 V and various dwell times. (b) Jtr-6μs vs. dwell time at dwell voltage 0.8 V for the planar and mesoporous cells used in Fig. 1 and 2. |
Fig. 3a shows a series of photocurrent transients taken after different dwell times (td) at 0.8 V for a planar TiO2/MAPI/Spiro cell. The sequence of the “step dwell probe” (SDP) experiment is shown in Scheme 2a. No significant change is apparent until td ≳ 2 ms. At td = 10 ms, the transient is noticeably less positive, implying that the size of, or collection efficiency in, region II has decreased. At 100 ms, the Jtr is approximately zero. At td > 1 second at 0.8 V the transient becomes negative. Fig. 3b shows the evolution of the Jtr-6μs with td on a log time axis for a planar and a mesoporous cell. For the planar cell the evolution occurs over the time from 2 ms to >20 seconds. (We treat the apparent difference in response rate between the m-TiO2 and planar cells in the next section.) The purple long-dashed line in Fig. 3b is a single exponential fit to the data. The early part of the evolution can be fit by an exponential with a time constant of ∼40 ms, but the entire evolution cannot be fit by a single exponential. The later part of the evolution (1–20 seconds) occurs much more slowly. Many other cells, but not all, show this two part evolution (Fig. S4, ESI†). We note that the fastest changes in Jtr-6μs (e.g. <10 ms) could be due to ion movement or to trapping of electronic charges injected into the MAPI layer by the applied bias. In other words, electrons injected over the conduction band peak (at the region I/II boundary) and/or holes injected over the valence band “peak” at the region II/III boundary. We give some arguments concerning these two possibilities in the ESI,† however, our data cannot distinguish between them at this point. For the rest of the results section we retain the usage “mobile ions” for simplicity.
To determine the uniqueness of these transients, we have also tested the SDP experiment on silicon cells, dye sensitized cells, and polymer/PCBM cells. None of these cell types show positive photocurrent transients at forward bias voltages less than Vbi (Fig. S5, ESI†). At potentials larger than Vbi, polymer cells show a constant positive photocurrent transient, as expected (Fig. S5c, ESI†). We have also tested a single CdTe cell. For this cell, we do measure small positive photocurrent transients for voltages very near Voc, and for very short dwell times (Fig. S6, ESI†) The time scales for the evolution of the positive transients in CdTe are so different from those we observe for MAPI (Fig. 3) that we cannot yet say whether or not they stem from the same physical mechanism. Additional measurements on CdTe, and CIGS cells will be required.
In order to correctly measure the evolution of the band energy profile at very short times we have developed a new experiment that uses two voltage steps. A schematic of the experiment is shown in Scheme 2b and the associated band edge profiles are shown in Scheme 3. We refer to this experiment as Step-Dwell-Step-Probe (SDSP). First, we let the mobile ion distribution evolve at Vd, for a time td. Then we shift to a different voltage, V probe (Vpr), where we measure a Jtr after 40 μs. The 40 μs dwell is to allow the electrode capacitance to discharge. The rational of the experiment is as follows (Scheme 3c). By stepping from a given Vd to a lower Vpr we can quickly decrease the value of VII by a fixed amount, whatever the value of VII was before the step. With a very short dwell at Vpr, no further motion of the mobile ions will occur before the transient is measured. Thus, after a short (e.g. 1 ms) dwell at Vd, and then stepping to the correct Vpr, we can shift VII from a value in the plateau region of Fig. 2, to a value below the plateau region where Jtr-6μs will be effected by the change in the mobile ion distribution that happened at Vd. Scheme 3c shows the theory for the specific example of Vd = 0.8 V, td = ∼1 ms, and Vpr = 0.6 or 0.3 V and Fig. 4a shows the measured Jtrs. In Fig. 4a, the step to Vpr = 0.6 causes only a small change in the Jtr relative to Vpr = 0.8 V. However, the step to Vpr = 0.3 decreases VII from 0.45 V, where Jtr-6μs is in the plateau region, to 0.075 V, where the Jtr-6μs will be negative (solid blue line in Fig. 4a). By contrast, applying Vd = 0.3 V for only 100 μs (as in Fig. 2) results in a positive transient (Scheme 3d).
Fig. 4b shows the resulting Jtr-6μs for Vd = 0.8 V and a wide range of td and Vpr. To perform the experiment, we use one Vd, and a given td, and then measure Jtr-6μs across the range of Vpr. We then change td and again scan across Vpr. Between each Jtr acquisition, the cell is allowed to relax for 1 minute or more at short circuit in the dark. The cell for Fig. 4 was a planar TiO2/MAPI/Spiro device from the same batch as the ones shown in Fig. 1–3. The dwell times range from 100 μs to 150 ms, and the probe voltages from −0.8 V (reverse bias) to 1.1 V, just beyond the steady state Voc. The points of a given dwell time are connected by dotted lines. A selection of the photocurrent transients is shown in Fig. S7 (ESI†). The red circles show the Jtr-6μs at various Vpr after a dwell of 100 μs at 0.8 V. The blue squares are Jtr-6μs at Vpr after a 1 ms dwell at 0.8 V. Although there is no change to the transient at Vpr = 0.8 V, there is a significant shift toward the negative in the transients with Vpr ≤ 0.5 V (blue arrow in Fig. 4 and data in Fig. S8, ESI†). Between 0 and 0.5 V, the td = 1 ms data are shifted about 0.1 V to the right of the td = 100 μs data. The green triangles are the Jtr-6μs at Vpr after a 5 ms dwell at 0.8 V. Again, the transient at Vpr = 0.8 V hardly changes at all, however, there is a large change in the transient at Vpr = 0.5 V. Between Vpr = 0 to 0.7 V the green points are shifted about 0.4 V to the right of the red points (green arrow). From this we can conclude that during 1 ms at 0.8 V, the mobile ions move enough to remove 0.08 V of the original potential difference across region II (V0II). Likewise, during 5 ms at 0.8 V, the mobile ions move enough to remove 0.32 V of V0II. (Recall that the change in VII is ∼80% of the change in applied voltage (Vpr–Vd), see Scheme 1.)
An interesting feature of Fig. 4 is that the lines of Jtr-6μs vs. Vpr are nearly parallel. The simplest way to explain this result is that the thickness of regions I and III, the space charge layer width, does not change as the mobile ions equilibrate to the new potential, at least out to 150 ms. This is consistent with the behavior of an electrolyte, where the Debye length is a function of the ion concentration, but essentially independent of the potential drop. In contrast, the depletion width of a Schottky barrier or n–p junction, determined by fixed donors and free charges, changes significantly with applied potential. This is a significant difference in operation between MAPI cells and conventional inorganic solar cells that highlights the need for care in applying conventional analytical methods.
Fig. 6 Photocurrent transients from longer light pulses. Transients from the same planar cell shown in Fig. 1 and 2. Pulses from a 735 nm LED. |
The lack of overshoots at both light on and light off has strong implications regarding the nature of the charge collection in the band valleys. Specifically, it indicates that there is very little free charge (i.e. un-trapped electrons and holes) in the cell at any point during the photocurrent transient at forward bias. To understand this assertion, consider the situation at 0.4 ms along the green curve, just before the light is turned off. At that point, the photocurrent has decreased from 4 mA cm−2 to 1.5 mA cm−2. Assuming that light absorption and charge separation have not changed during the first 0.4 ms, this means that 2.5 mA cm−2 of recombination is occurring in the cell. Integrating the photocurrent from 0 to 0.4 ms, and assuming mainly displacement current, we find ∼0.6 μC will have collected in the band valleys. Just after the light is turned off, recombination will begin to drain the accumulated charge in the band valleys, resulting in a negative displacement current in the external circuit. The recombination current would continue as long as there was accumulated free charge to recombine. Thus, if any significant part of the accumulated charge were able to recombine, the initial negative displacement current would equal the recombination current (−2.5 mA cm−2) and decay over tens of μs. Instead, we measure ∼60 μA cm−2 of negative displacement current after the light is turned off at 0.4 ms. From this, we conclude that there is very little free charge present at 0.4 ms. The negative overshoot does increase for subsequent light off steps, e.g. 0.7 ms, but it never becomes larger than 0.35 mA cm−2.
First, if all of the photogenerated charges are flowing into deep traps, we can estimate the number of traps required. The integrated positive current in Fig. 6b is about 3 μC cm−2. Assuming the trapped electrons (and/or holes) are situated in a layer of ∼50 nm thickness, the trap density would have to be ≥4 × 1018 cm−3. This value is high, but might be possible. In addition, however, these trapped electrons must have lifetimes of ≥10 ms for there to be so little decay in their population over 1 ms (Fig. 6b). This lifetime seems anomalously long. Traps normally accelerate recombination, thus the lifetime of trapped charges is normally short. We have performed additional experiments in an attempt to measure the lifetime of the effect of a pulse of light on the cell (Fig. S10 and S11, ESI†). Fig. S11 (ESI†) presents an experiment wherein we first expose the cell to 1 ms of 1 Sun at SC, delay up to 1 second in the dark at SC, and then perform a SDP experiment at 0.8 V. In this cell, about one half of the effect of a 1 ms pulse of light is still present after one second. This long lifetime appears to argue against electrostatic trapping of charges as the explanation for Fig. 6. Chemical trapping, in other words charge localization accompanied by the rearrangement of atoms or bonds, would seem to be required. In addition to the long lifetime, the charge traps must be inhomogeneously distributed across the cell. Electrons and holes trapped homogeneously in space do not contribute to a change in electric field, thus give no displacement current. The traps could be related to the ion vacancies or interstitials created during the equilibration to the built-in field, but we have no proof for this association.
We now examine the other possibility; that the lack of free charges in the band valleys is due to leakage of charges from the band valleys to the adjacent “wrong” electrodes. Poor selectivity at the electrodes (a.k.a. surface recombination) has been previously invoked as necessary for the JV hysteresis, and the characteristics of photovoltage transients.13,31 If the leakage current is high very little charge accumulates in the band valleys and the lack of overshoot at the light turn-off is expected. However if there are few charges in the band valleys, the decrease in photocurrent over the first 1 ms cannot be due to a change in the potential profile. Instead, we have to explain the decreasing photocurrent by a rapid decrease in the leakage current. In other words, by a rapid increase in the selectivity of the electrode(s). Whatever physical change causes the decreasing photocurrent must also be consistent with the memory effect. We can most easily explain the decreasing current and the memory effect if the increase in electrode selectivity is caused by ion motion. Ions that have drifted to or away from the surface during the light pulse will not drift back in the dark because the voltage bias is still applied. In Fig. 6, one ms of NIR illumination at 0.8 V reduces the subsequent photocurrent peak from 4 to 0.7 mA cm−2. However, the same decrease in the photocurrent peak with time also occurs under dark bias, only much more slowly. From Fig. 3b we can see that for the planar cell it takes about 50 ms at 0.8 V for the Jtr-6μs to decrease from 4 to ∼0.7 mA cm−2. Thus, for the same bias voltage, the decrease in the photocurrent transient magnitude occurs ∼50 times faster under light than in dark.
In summary, if we reject the “long lived trapping without recombination” explanation discussed above, we are forced to assert that light can have a large effect on the mobile ion mobility, concentration, or impact on the electrodes. As with the long lived trapping, we do not have a physical explanation for this phenomena. However, possible effects of light absorption on the structure of MAPI have been observed by other authors. Zhou et al. measured a significant expansion of the MAPI lattice (up to 0.1%) under illumination.45 They theorized that photogenerated charges reduce the barriers to methylammonium (MA) rotation. Similarly Coll et al. measured a 4 fold increase in the piezoelectric coefficient under illumination.46 Liu et al. developed a possible model for this photo-piezoelectric effect, again based on reduction of the barrier for MA rotation.47 Although we do not endorse any particular explanation at this time, the proposed photo-induced acceleration of MA rotation could probably explain our observations.
Lastly, we point out that the above analysis has been carried out in the context of a one dimensional model. Some of the results in Fig. S10 and S11 (ESI†) may need to be explained by lateral variation of cell characteristics. For example, dark injected charges will follow paths of least resistance across the cell. It could be the case that the dark current flows through only a small fraction of the absorber layer volume. In such a case, the distribution of the applied potential in the MAPI will also differ laterally. Where the bulk resistance is low, surface resistance will dominate and the applied field will drop at the surface. Where MAPI resistance is high, the field will drop across the bulk of the absorber, causing more ion movement across region II. On the other hand, during a light pulse, photogenerated charges are created more or less homogeneously. If the trapping and recombination are distributed unevenly in the lateral dimensions, as well as in the vertical, dark injected and photogenerated charges could end up in different traps.
We have examined the anomalous characteristics of the long and interrupted photocurrent transients in Fig. 6. The first level implication is clear; there is no significant free charge accumulating in the band valleys during a long light pulse on this cell, yet the photocurrent decreases quickly. We have proposed two possible explanations, each of which require a novel physical phenomena to be occurring. We hope to confirm one or the other of these hypotheses in the near future.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ee02914k |
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