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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

Lead-free organic–inorganic tin halide perovskites for photovoltaic applications

Energy and Environmental Science Royal Society of Chemistry 7:9 (2014) 3061-3068

Authors:

Nakita Noel, Sam Stranks, A Abate, C Wehrenfennig, S Guarnera, Amir Abbas Haghighirad, A Sadhanala, Giles Eperon, SK Pathak, Michael Johnston, A Petrozza, Laura Herz, Henry Snaith

Abstract:

Already exhibiting solar to electrical power conversion efficiencies of over 17%, organic-inorganic lead halide perovskite solar cells are one of the most promising emerging contenders in the drive to provide a cheap and clean source of energy. One concern however, is the potential toxicology issue of lead, a key component in the archetypical material. The most likely substitute is tin, which like lead, is also a group 14 metal. While organic-inorganic tin halide perovskites have shown good semiconducting behaviour, the instability of tin in its 2+ oxidation state has thus far proved to be an overwhelming challenge. Here, we report the first completely lead-free, CH3NH 3SnI3 perovskite solar cell processed on a mesoporous TiO2 scaffold, reaching efficiencies of over 6% under 1 sun illumination. Remarkably, we achieve open circuit voltages over 0.88 V from a material which has a 1.23 eV band gap.
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Anomalous hysteresis in perovskite solar cells

journal of physical chemistry letters American Chemical Society 5:9 (2014) 1511-1515

Authors:

Henry Snaith, Antonio Abate, James Ball, Giles Eperon, Tomas Leijtens, Nakita K Noel, Sam Stranks, Jacob Tse-Wei Wang, Konrad Wojciechowski, Wei Zhang

Abstract:

Perovskite solar cells have rapidly risen to the forefront of emerging photovoltaic technologies, exhibiting rapidly rising efficiencies. This is likely to continue to rise, but in the development of these solar cells there are unusual characteristics that have arisen, specifically an anomalous hysteresis in the current-voltage curves. We identify this phenomenon and show some examples of factors that make the hysteresis more or less extreme. We also demonstrate stabilized power output under working conditions and suggest that this is a useful parameter to present, alongside the current-voltage scan derived power conversion efficiency. We hypothesize three possible origins of the effect and discuss its implications on device efficiency and future research directions. Understanding and resolving the hysteresis is essential for further progress and is likely to lead to a further step improvement in performance.
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Excitons versus free charges in organo-lead tri-halide perovskites

Nature Communications Springer Nature 5:1 (2014) 3586

Authors:

Valerio D’Innocenzo, Giulia Grancini, Marcelo JP Alcocer, Ajay Ram Srimath Kandada, Samuel D Stranks, Michael M Lee, Guglielmo Lanzani, Henry J Snaith, Annamaria Petrozza
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The Importance of Perovskite Pore Filling in Organometal Mixed Halide Sensitized TiO2‑Based Solar Cells

The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters American Chemical Society (ACS) 5:7 (2014) 1096-1102

Authors:

Tomas Leijtens, Beat Lauber, Giles E Eperon, Samuel D Stranks, Henry J Snaith
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High charge carrier mobilities and lifetimes in organolead trihalide perovskites

Advanced Materials 26:10 (2014) 1584-1589

Authors:

C Wehrenfennig, GE Eperon, MB Johnston, HJ Snaith, LM Herz

Abstract:

Organolead trihalide perovskites are shown to exhibit the best of both worlds: charge-carrier mobilities around 10 cm2 V-1 s -1 and low bi-molecular charge-recombination constants. The ratio of the two is found to defy the Langevin limit of kinetic charge capture by over four orders of magnitude. This mechanism causes long (micrometer) charge-pair diffusion lengths crucial for flat-heterojunction photovoltaics. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
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