Scientists Unlock Secrets of Super Solar Power Perovskites

The best hope for cheap, super-efficient solar power is a remarkable family of crystalline materials called hybrid perovskites. In just five years of development, hybrid perovskite solar cells have attained power conversion efficiencies that took decades to achieve with the top-performing conventional materials used to generate electricity from sunlight. Now researchers at the University of Utah, in collaboration with the University of Texas at Dallas, have uncovered some of the secrets behind the amazing material’s performance.

Schematic presentation of the obtained magnetic field effect of photocarriers in photovoltaic cells and injected carriers in light emitting diodes based on hybrid organic/inorganic perovskite semiconductors, which originates from different precession frequencies of the electron (red) and hole (blue) about an applied magnetic field (arrow). (Photo: University of Utah)

Among the practical results of the new study is proof of a way to rapidly test the performance of different prototypes of hybrid perovskite materials using magnetic fields. Applying a magnetic field makes it possible to glean clues about the behavior of electrons and “holes” in semiconductor compounds. In photovoltaic solar cells, molecules absorb incoming photons of sunlight. Each absorbed photon can generate an exciton, the pairing of an electron and a corresponding electron hole. These pairings are short-lived and split into free, charge-carrying particles that drive an electric current.

Electrons and holes have a magnetic-related property called ‘spin’, a form of angular momentum, and the torque of a magnetic field can alter the spin direction. Spin can’t be observed directly, but spin properties can be inferred by looking at readily measurable properties, such as changes in the electrical conductivity of a material, or changes in photoluminescence – its tendency to emit light after absorbing photons – when it is subjected to a magnetic field.

The researchers measured magnetic field-induced changes in these properties in an assortment of fabricated hybrid perovskite solar cells having different solar power conversion efficiencies. They used a typical hybrid perovskite material, methylammonium lead iodide, or MAPbI3. (Hybrid perovskites follow the naming convention MAPbX3, with MA denoting the organic methylammonium group that is combined with an inorganic group made of lead (Pb) and either chloride, bromide, or iodide (X)). Contrary to conventional wisdom in the field, the Utah scientists found pronounced magnetic field effects. The magnetic properties of the heavy atoms of lead and iodine were thought to minimize magnetic field effects in hybrid perovskite solar cells.

So, how does it work? The researchers proposed a mechanism to explain the effects based on how a magnetic field changes the spin configuration of electron-hole pairs. The spin configuration affects the rate at which electron-hole pairs split apart or recombine, which in turn respectively changes the electrical conductivity and photoluminescence of the perovskite. They dubbed this effect the ‘delta-g mechanism’, with g being a factor that describes the magnetic moment of an electron in the material. Delta-g is the difference between the g factors of an electron and hole, a difference that becomes crucial in how hybrid perovskite materials perform.

They verified this mechanism by measuring delta-g directly using a technique called field-induced circular polarized emission. It proved to be much larger than delta-g in ordinary organic solar cells, as would be expected if the delta-g mechanism were correct. For further confirmation, the researchers used a spectroscopy technique to measure the fleeting lifetimes – in trillionths of a second – of electron-hole pairs created by light absorption in the hybrid perovskite solar cells. The results also fit the delta-g mechanism.

The findings point to an answer to a critical question: whether hybrid perovskite devices behave more like silicon solar cells or like so-called excitonic solar cells made of organic polymers. What the researchers found is that the material is not excitonic, meaning it is not like organic photovoltaic materials.

The efficiency of converting sunlight to electric power has a theoretical limit of 33 percent. The hybrid perovskite photovoltaic devices are pushing 20 percent, not as good as the 26 percent of the best silicon cells, but closing in – and the hybrid perovskites can be produced at a fraction of the cost. The new findings provide more detailed understanding of the underlying physics that should help researchers to fully optimize hybrid perovskite solar cells.

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