Effect of sub-bandgap defects on radiative and non-radiative open-circuit voltage losses in perovskite solar cells

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Abstract

The efficiency of perovskite solar cells is affected by open-circuit voltage losses due to radiative and non-radiative charge recombination. When estimated using sensitive photocurrent measurements that cover the above- and sub-bandgap regions, the radiative open-circuit voltage is often unphysically low. Here we report sensitive photocurrent and electroluminescence spectroscopy to probe radiative recombination at sub-bandgap defects in wide-bandgap mixed-halide lead perovskite solar cells. The radiative ideality factor associated with the optical transitions increases from 1, above and near the bandgap edge, to ~2 at mid-bandgap. Such photon energy-dependent ideality factor corresponds to a many-diode model. The radiative open-circuit voltage limit derived from this many-diode model enables differentiating between radiative and non-radiative voltage losses. The latter are deconvoluted into contributions from the bulk and interfaces via determining the quasi-Fermi level splitting. The experiments show that while sub-bandgap defects do not contribute to radiative voltage loss, they do affect non-radiative voltage losses.

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Aalbers, G. J. W., van der Pol, T. P. A., Datta, K., Remmerswaal, W. H. M., Wienk, M. M., & Janssen, R. A. J. (2024). Effect of sub-bandgap defects on radiative and non-radiative open-circuit voltage losses in perovskite solar cells. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45512-8

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