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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Henry Snaith FRS

Professor of Physics

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Snaith group
  • Advanced Device Concepts for Next-Generation Photovoltaics
Henry.Snaith@physics.ox.ac.uk
Robert Hooke Building, room G21
  • About
  • Publications

Perovskite based optoelectronics: molecular design perspectives – a themed collection

Molecular Systems Design & Engineering Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 3:5 (2018) 700-701

Authors:

Nakita K Noel, Henry J Snaith
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Unravelling the improved electronic and structural properties of methylammonium lead iodide deposited from acetonitrile

Chemistry of Materials American Chemical Society 30:21 (2018) 7737-7743

Authors:

Alexandra Ramadan, Nakita K Noel, S Fearn, Neil Young, M Walker, LA Rochford, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

Perovskite-based photovoltaics are an emerging solar technology with lab scale device efficiencies of over 22 %, and significant steps are being made toward their commercialization. Conventionally high efficiency perovskite solar cells are formed from high boiling point, polar aprotic solvent solutions. Methylammonium lead iodide (CH3NH3PbI3) films can be made from a range of solvents and blends; however, the role the solvent system plays in determining the properties of the resulting perovskite films is poorly understood. Acetonitrile (ACN), in the presence of methylamine (MA), is a viable nontoxic solvent for fabrication of CH3NH3PbI3 photovoltaic devices with efficiencies >18 %. Herein we examine films prepared from ACN/MA and dimethylformamide (DMF) and scrutinize their physical and electronic properties using spectroscopy, scanning probe imaging, and ion scattering. Significant differences are observed in the chemistry and electronic structure of CH3NH3PbI3 films made with each solvent, ACN/MA produces films with superior properties resulting in more efficient photovoltaic devices. Here we present a holistic and complete understanding of a high performance perovskite material from an electronic, physical, and structural perspective and establish a robust toolkit with which to understand and optimize photovoltaic perovskites.
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The effects of doping density and temperature on the optoelectronic properties of formamidinium tin triiodide thin films

Advanced Materials Wiley 30:44 (2018) 1804506

Authors:

Rebecca L Milot, Matthew T Klug, Christopher Davies, Zhiping Wang, Hans AP Kraus, Henry J Snaith, Michael B Johnston, Laura M Herz

Abstract:

Intrinsic and extrinsic optoelectronic properties are unraveled for formamidinium tin triiodide (FASnI3) thin films, whose background hole doping density was varied through SnF2 addition during film fabrication. Monomolecular charge-carrier recombination exhibits both a dopant-mediated part that grows linearly with hole doping density and remnant contributions that remain under tin-enriched processing conditions. At hole densities near 1020 cm-3, a strong Burstein-Moss effect increases absorption onset energies by ~300meV beyond the band gap energy of undoped FASnI3 (shown to be 1.2 eV at 5 K and 1.35 eV at room temperature). At very high doping densities (1020 cm-3), temperature-dependent measurements indicate that the effective charge-carrier mobility is suppressed through scattering with ionized dopants. Once the background hole concentration is nearer 1019 cm-3 and below, the charge-carrier mobility increases with decreasing temperature according to ~T-1.2, suggesting it is limited mostly by intrinsic interactions with lattice vibrations. For the lowest doping concentration of 7.2´1018 cm^-3, charge-carrier mobilities reach a value of 67 cm2V-1s-1at room temperature and 470 cm2V-1s-1 at 50 K. Intra-excitonic transitions observed in the THz-frequency photoconductivity spectra at 5K reveal an exciton binding energy of only 3.1 meV for FASnI3, in agreement with the low bandgap energy exhibited by this perovskite.
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Meso-superstructured perovskite solar cells: Revealing the role of the mesoporous layer

Journal of Physical Chemistry C American Chemical Society 122:37 (2018) 21239-21247

Authors:

D Ramirez, Kelly Schutt, JF Montoya, S Mesa, Jongchul Lim, Henry J Snaith, F Jaramillo

Abstract:

While perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have been developed with different device architectures, mesoporous devices have provided the highest power conversion efficiencies. In this work, the working mechanism of both positive-intrinsic-negative (p-i-n) and negative-intrinsic-positive (n-i-p) meso-superstructured (MSSC) PSCs, which include a thin interlayer of porous alumina at the bottom electrode, is explored. Interestingly, for both p-i-n and n-i-p architecture, the mesoporous configuration was more efficient than its planar counterpart. For MSSC SnO2-based n-i-p devices, that result was primarily due to an increase in Voc and Jsc, resulting from improved band alignment and filling of the electron trap states (n-doping at the SnO2/perovskite interface), which led to devices with 21.0% efficiency and 20.3% stabilized power output (SPO). Although MSSC NiOx-based p-i-n meso-superstructured devices were less efficient due to lower Voc, a slightly higher Jsc and fill factor improvement was achieved by the Al2O3 mesoporous layer, resulting in devices with 16.9% efficiency. Importantly, the electronic nature of the perovskite is dependent upon its physical confinement within a mesoporous scaffold. Therefore, either p- or n-type semiconductor/perovskite interfaces can be engineered by selectively modifying the semiconductor behavior with the introduction of an insulating mesoporous scaffold interlayer.
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Layered mixed tin–lead hybrid perovskite solar cells with high stability

ACS Energy Letters American Chemical Society 3:9 (2018) 2246-2251

Authors:

D Ramirez, Kelly Schutt, Zhiping Wang, AJ Pearson, E Ruggeri, Henry J Snaith, SD Stranks, F Jaramillo

Abstract:

For neat Pb perovskites, two-dimensional (2D) hybrid perovskites, where n layers of inorganic material are separated by a long-chain organic cation, generally exhibit greater stability but have lower photovoltaic performance characteristics, motivating the study of 2D/3D mixed-dimension systems to realize both high efficiency and stability. In this Letter, we demonstrate such optimal compromise between performance and stability using formamidinium, cesium, and t-butylammonium as A-site cations with Pb:Sn mixed-metal low-band-gap perovskites. Perovskite solar cells based on n = 4 and 5 lead–tin perovskites achieved power conversion efficiencies of up to 9.3 and 10.6%, respectively, and correspondingly retained 47 and 29% of their initial efficiency during storage in nitrogen for 2000 h. A similar stability trend for n = 4 over n = 5 was also observed for unencapsulated devices during continuous operation under a combined air atmosphere and temperature for 10 h, resulting in improved stability over the 3D lead–tin counterpart.
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