Robust Tin-Based Perovskite Solar Cells with Hybrid Organic Cations to Attain Efficiency Approaching 10

Adv Mater. 2019 Jan;31(2):e1804835. doi: 10.1002/adma.201804835. Epub 2018 Nov 9.

Abstract

The stability of a tin-based perovskite solar cell is a major challenge. Here, hybrid tin-based perovskite solar cells in a new series that incorporate a nonpolar organic cation, guanidinium (GA+ ), in varied proportions into the formamidinium (FA+ ) tin triiodide perovskite (FASnI3 ) crystal structure in the presence of 1% ethylenediammonium diiodide (EDAI2 ) as an additive, are reported. The device performance is optimized at a precursor ratio (GAI:FAI) of 20:80 to attain a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 8.5% when prepared freshly; the efficiencies continuously increase to attain a record PCE of 9.6% after storage in a glove-box environment for 2000 h. The hybrid perovskite works stably under continuous 1 sun illumination for 1 h and storage in air for 6 days without encapsulation. Such a tin-based perovskite passes all harsh standard tests, and the efficiency of a fresh device, 8.3%, is certified. The great performance and stability of the device reported herein attains a new milestone for lead-free perovskite solar cells on a path toward commercial development.

Keywords: additives; guanidinium; hybrid cations; lead-free perovskites; solar cells.