posted on 2019-04-24, 13:03authored byIgal Levine, Omar Garcia Vera, Michael Kulbak, Davide-Raffaele Ceratti, Carolin Rehermann, José A. Márquez, Sergiu Levcenko, Thomas Unold, Gary Hodes, Isaac Balberg, David Cahen, Thomas Dittrich
Lead
bromide-based halide perovskites are of interest for wide-band-gap
(>1.75 eV) absorbers for low-cost solar spectrum splitting to boost
solar-to-electrical energy conversion efficiency/area by adding them
to c-Si or Cu(In,Ga)Se2 PV cells and for photoelectrochemical
solar fuel synthesis. Deep in-gap electronic states in PV absorbers
serve as recombination centers and are detrimental for the cell’s
photovoltaic performance, especially for the open-circuit voltage
(Voc). We find four different deep defect
states in polycrystalline layers of mixed-cation
lead tribromide from high-sensitivity modulated surface photovoltage
(SPV) spectroscopy. Measurements were performed with different contact
configurations, on complete solar cells and on samples before and
after aging or stressing at 85 °C under illumination. Three of
the four states, with energies of ∼0.63, 0.73, and 1.35 eV
below the conduction band edge, are assigned to intrinsic defects,
whereas defect states in the middle of the band gap could be associated
with (uncontrolled) impurities.