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Phenylalkylammonium passivation enables perovskite light emitting diodes with record high-radiance operational lifetime

Authors :
Nan Li
Yuwei Guo
Fangyan Xie
Ni Zhao
Geert Brocks
Shuxia Tao
Mengyu Chen
Zhongcheng Yuan
Feng Gao
Sofia Apergi
Chunyang Yin
Center for Computational Energy Research
Materials Simulation & Modelling
Electronic Structure Materials
Computational Materials Physics
EIRES Chem. for Sustainable Energy Systems
MESA+ Institute
Computational Materials Science
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, 12:644. Nature Publishing Group, Nature communications, 12(1):644. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Perovskite light emitting diodes suffer from poor operational stability, exhibiting a rapid decay of external quantum efficiency within minutes to hours after turn-on. To address this issue, we explore surface treatment of perovskite films with phenylalkylammonium iodide molecules of varying alkyl chain lengths. Combining experimental characterization and theoretical modelling, we show that these molecules stabilize the perovskite through suppression of iodide ion migration. The stabilization effect is enhanced with increasing chain length due to the stronger binding of the molecules with the perovskite surface, as well as the increased steric hindrance to reconfiguration for accommodating ion migration. The passivation also reduces the surface defects, resulting in a high radiance and delayed roll-off of external quantum efficiency. Using the optimized passivation molecule, phenylpropylammonium iodide, we achieve devices with an efficiency of 17.5%, a radiance of 1282.8 W sr−1 m−2 and a record T50 half-lifetime of 130 h under 100 mA cm−2.<br />Perovskite light emitting diodes suffer from operational stability, showing rapid decay of performance within minutes to hours after turn-on. Here, the authors investigate how the steric and Coulomb interaction of ammonium passivation molecules with varying alkyl chain length can improve device stability by suppressing iodide ion migration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00dda8dc1d078ede90556d7d3fbe9d7f