Abstract

Organic-inorganic halide perovskite materials are considered excellent active layers in the fabrication of highly efficient and low-cost photovoltaic devices. This contribution demonstrates that rapid and low-temperature air-plasma treatment of mixed organic-inorganic halide perovskite film is a promising technique, controlling its opto-electrical surface properties by changing the ratio of organic-to-inorganic components. Plasma treatment of perovskite films was performed with high power-density (25 kW/m2 and 100 W/cm3) diffuse coplanar surface barrier discharge (DCSBD) at 70 °C in ambient air. The results show that short plasma treatment time (1 s, 2 s, and 5 s) led to a relatively enlargement of grain size, however, longer plasma treatment time (10 s and 20 s) led to an etching of the surface. The band-gap energy of the perovskite films was related to the duration of plasma treatment; short periods (≤5 s) led to a widening of the band gap from ~1.66 to 1.73 eV, while longer exposure (>5 s) led to a narrowing of the band gap to approx. 1.63 eV and fast degradation of the film due to etching. Surface analysis demonstrated that the film became homogeneous, with highly oriented crystals, after short plasma treatment; however, prolonging the plasma treatment led to morphological disorders and partial etching of the surface. The plasma treatment approach presented herein addresses important challenges in current perovskite solar cells: tuning the optoelectronic properties and manufacturing homogeneous perovskite films.

Highlights

  • Organic-inorganic halide perovskites have recently attracted considerable attention, largely because of their outstanding opto-electronic qualities, among them a high absorption coefficient, tunable band-gap energy, and high charge-carrier mobility [1,2,3,4]

  • The peak located at 14.1◦ corresponding to the (110) plane belongs to the MAPbI3−x Clx phase and the intensity of this peak decreased after plasma treatment but each treatment time led to different intensity

  • Ambient air low-temperature plasma treatment was successfully applied to perovskite film for the first time

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Summary

A Study on the Effect of Ambient Air Plasma

R&D Centre for Low-Cost Plasma and Nanotechnology Surface Modifications (CEPLANT), Department of Physical Electronics, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 267/2, 611 37 Brno, Czech Republic Received: 7 August 2019; Accepted: 5 September 2019; Published: 7 September 2019

Introduction
Film Deposition
Plasma Processing
Characterization
Results and Discussion
UV–VIS
Secondary
ATR-FTIR
Conclusions
Full Text
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