Is Photoluminescence Spectroscopy a Suitable Probe of Halide Segregation?

ACS Energy Letters American Chemical Society (ACS) (2026)

Authors:

JoshuaR S Lilly, Vincent J-Y Lim, Jay B Patel, Jae Eun Lee, Siyu Yan, Michael B Johnston, Laura M Herz

Abstract:

Mixed-halide perovskites exhibit ideal band gaps for use in perovskite-based multijunction photovoltaics, but stable performance is compromised by light-induced halide segregation. Photoluminescence (PL) tracking is universally used to monitor such photoinstability; however, here we reveal that such data do not accurately quantify halide segregation. We utilize a combination of simultaneously recorded PL and X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements to explore CH3NH3Pb(I1–x Br x )3 films across 18 different halide ratios. While PL data suggests that segregation rates increase exponentially with bromide fraction x, XRD patterns reveal that they are actually unchanged. We demonstrate that PL cannot accurately reflect the rate and extent of halide segregation because it is governed by charge funneling to iodide-rich minority domains, which is strongly influenced by additional factors, including luminescence efficiency, band energetics, and charge extraction. To assess the efficacy of treatments to suppress such photoinstabilities, it is therefore essential to probe changes across the full material volume, e.g. by monitoring XRD or absorption spectra.

Atomic Structure of Grain Boundaries, Dislocations and Associated Strain in Templated Co-evaporated Photoactive Halide Perovskites

(2026)

Authors:

Huyen T Pham, Siyu Yan, Zhou Xu, Weilun Li, Sergey Gorelick, Michael B Johnston, Joanne Etheridge

Halide segregation governs interfacial charge-transfer pathways in mixed-halide perovskites

EES Solar Royal Society of Chemistry (2026)

Authors:

Jae Eun Lee, Robert DJ Oliver, Joshua RS Lilly, Rehmat Sood-Goodwin, Aleksander M Ulatowski, Alexandra J Ramadan, Henry J Snaith, Michael B Johnston, Laura M Herz

Abstract:

Mixed-halide perovskites offer ideal bandgaps for tandem solar cells, but they suffer from light-induced halide segregation, which compromises their operational stability. Here, we directly probe the impact of halide segregation on charge-carrier dynamics at the interface between a mixed-halide perovskite and charge transport layers by using a free-space synchronous multimodal spectroscopy approach, combining time-resolved microwave conductivity, time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) and steady-state PL. We present a method to distinguish directly between charge-carrier dynamics dominated by either majority or minority carriers, enabling us to isolate effects arising from charge-selective extraction from the perovskite to commonly used hole- or electron transport layers, i.e. poly[bis(4-phenyl)(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)amine] (PTAA) and SnO2, respectively. We show that halide segregation creates iodide-rich phases that capture charge carriers within sub-nanoseconds, which slightly reduces their mobilities at microwave frequencies. We reveal that charge extraction from such iodide-rich domains is still surprisingly feasible, but competes with enhanced radiative recombination resulting from higher charge concentrations caused by funnelling into these minority phases. We demonstrate that together such effects reduce charge diffusion lengths and can account for the widely observed reduction in open-circuit voltages and short-circuit currents in solar cells under operational conditions. Our findings unravel the causes underpinning the adverse impact of halide segregation and provide guidelines to improve device performance.

Improving amplified spontaneous emission in vacuum-deposited CsPbBr3 thin films from microstructural optimisation

SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics (2026) 53

Authors:

Qimu Yuan, Weilun Li, Ford Wagner, Vincent Lim, Laura M Herz, Joanne Etheridge, Michael B Johnston

Crystal-facet-directed all vacuum-deposited perovskite solar cells

Nature Materials Springer Nature (2026)

Authors:

Xinyi Shen, Wing Tung Hui, Shuaifeng Hu, Fengning Yang, Junke Wang, Jin Yao, Atse Louwen, Bryan Siu Ting Tam, Lirong Rong, David McMeekin, Kilian Lohmann, Qimu Yuan, Matthew Naylor, Manuel Kober-Czerny, Seongrok Seo, Philippe Holzhey, Karl-Augustin Zaininger, Mark Christoforo, Perrine Carroy, Vincent Barth, Fion Sze Yan Yeung, Nakita Noel, Michael Johnston, Yen-Hung Lin, Henry Snaith

Abstract:

Vacuum-based deposition is a scalable, solvent-free industrial method ideal for uniform coatings on complex substrates. However, all vacuum-deposited perovskite solar cells fabricated by thermal evaporation trail solution-processed counterparts in efficiency and stability due to film quality challenges, necessitating advancement and improved understanding. Here, we report a co-evaporation route for 1.67-eV wide-bandgap perovskites by introducing a PbCl2 co-source to optimize film quality. We promote perovskite formation with pronounced (100) “face-up” orientation and deliver a certified all vacuum-deposited solar cell with 18.35% efficiency (19.3% in the lab) for 0.25-cm2 devices (18.5% for 1-cm2 cells). These cells retain 80% of peak efficiency after 1,080 hours under the ISOS-L-2 protocol. Leveraging operando hyperspectral imaging, we provide spatiotemporal spectral insight into halide segregation and trap-mediated recombination, correlating microscopic luminescence features with macroscopic device performance while distinguishing radiative from non-ideal recombination channels. We further demonstrate 27.2%-efficient 1-cm2 evaporated perovskite-on-silicon tandems and outdoor stability of all vacuum-deposited tandems in Italy, retaining ~80% initial performance after 8 months.