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Organolead halide perovskites currently are the new front‐runners as light absorbers in hybrid solar cells, as they combine efficiencies passing already 20% with deposition temperatures below 100 °C and cheap solution‐based fabrication routes. Long‐term stability remains a major obstacle for application on an industrial scale. Here, it is demonstrated that significant decomposition effects already occur during annealing of a methylammonium lead triiode perovskite at 85 °C even in inert atmosphere thus violating international standards. The observed behavior supports the view of currently used perovskite materials as soft matter systems with low formation energies, thus representing a major bottleneck for their application, especially in countries with high average temperatures. This result can trigger a broader search for new perovskite families with improved thermal stability.
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Bert Conings
IMEC
Jeroen Drijkoningen
IMEC
Nicolas Gauquelin
University of Antwerp
Advanced Energy Materials
University of Antwerp
Hasselt University
Institute of Molecular Science and Technologies
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Conings et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d739e5779571b57e48f728 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.201500477
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