posted on 2020-09-16, 18:11authored byLoreta
A. Muscarella, Eline M. Hutter, Francesca Wittmann, Young Won Woo, Young-Kwang Jung, Lucie McGovern, Jan Versluis, Aron Walsh, Huib J. Bakker, Bruno Ehrler
The
bandgap tunability of mixed-halide perovskites makes them promising
candidates for light-emitting diodes and tandem solar cells. However,
illuminating mixed-halide perovskites results in the formation of
segregated phases enriched in a single halide. This segregation occurs
through ion migration, which is also observed in single-halide compositions,
and whose control is thus essential to enhance the lifetime and stability.
Using pressure-dependent transient absorption spectroscopy, we find
that the formation rates of both iodide- and bromide-rich phases in
MAPb(BrxI1–x)3 reduce by 2 orders of magnitude on increasing
the pressure to 0.3 GPa. We explain this reduction from a compression-induced
increase of the activation energy for halide migration, which is supported
by first-principle calculations. A similar mechanism occurs when the
unit cell volume is reduced by incorporating a smaller cation. These
findings reveal that stability with respect to halide segregation
can be achieved either physically through compressive stress or chemically
through compositional engineering.