Tin-based halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) hold the most promise among lead-free PSCs, but they are plagued with inadequate environmental stability and power-conversion efficiency (PCE). Here we demonstrate that the optimum incorporation of a bulky divalent organic cation, 4-(aminomethyl)- piperidinium (4AMP), in FASnI(3) thin films improves stability, optoelectronic properties, and PSC performance. The optimized PSC yields a maximum PCE of 10.9% and good 500-h operational stability under continuous illumination. This is attributed to the unique thin-film structure, where the strong ionic bonding afforded by divalent 4AMP may provide near-full-coverage functionalization (encapsulation) of FASnI(3) grain surfaces and grain boundaries, retarding O-2/H2O ingression and mitigating Sn-defects for reduced photocarrier nonradiative recombination.
Michael Graetzel, Shaik Mohammed Zakeeruddin, Peng Wang, Felix Thomas Eickemeyer, Ming Ren
Jun Ho Yum, Kevin Sivula, Jiyoun Seo, Parnian Ferdowsi
Bo Chen, Bin Ding, Yan Liu, Xianfu Zhang