The Complex Degradation Mechanism of Copper Electrodes
on Lead Halide Perovskites
Posted on 2022-02-02 - 19:38
Lead halide perovskite
solar cells have reached power conversion
efficiencies during the past few years that rival those of crystalline
silicon solar cells, and there is a concentrated effort to commercialize
them. The use of gold electrodes, the current standard, is prohibitively
costly for commercial application. Copper is a promising low-cost
electrode material that has shown good stability in perovskite solar
cells with selective contacts. Furthermore, it has the potential to
be self-passivating through the formation of CuI, a copper salt which
is also used as a hole selective material. Based on these opportunities,
we investigated the interface reactions between lead halide perovskites
and copper in this work. Specifically, copper was deposited on the
perovskite surface, and the reactions were followed in detail using
synchrotron-based and in-house photoelectron spectroscopy. The results
show a rich interfacial chemistry with reactions starting upon deposition
and, with the exposure to oxygen and moisture, progress over many
weeks, resulting in significant degradation of both the copper and
the perovskite. The degradation results not only in the formation
of CuI, as expected, but also in the formation of two previously unreported
degradation products. The hope is that a deeper understanding of these
processes will aid in the design of corrosion-resistant copper-based
electrodes.
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Svanström, Sebastian; García-Fernández, Alberto; Jacobsson, T. Jesper; Bidermane, Ieva; Leitner, Torsten; Sloboda, Tamara; et al. (2022). The Complex Degradation Mechanism of Copper Electrodes
on Lead Halide Perovskites. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmaterialsau.1c00038