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Strain Engineering: Reduction of Microstrain at the Perovskite Surface via Alkali Metal Chloride Treatment Enhances Stability.

Abstract

Degradation of halide perovskites under a humid atmosphere is the major challenge preventing widespread commercial deployment of this material class. Here it is shown that strain engineering via alkali metal chloride treatment at the FAPbI3/SnO2 interface effectively improves moisture-related stability. CsCl and KCl treatments reduce microstrain at the perovskite surface and slow the α- to δ-phase transformation. Alkali metal treatments with LiCl, NaCl, and RbCl led to an increase in microstrain and faster degradation. The compressive strain at the perovskite surface was the smallest for CsCl and was linked to improved stability. First-principles density functional theory calculations confirm the preferential formation of alkali defects at interstitial positions at the perovskite surface. Particularly CsCl and KCl treatments lead to a release of compressive strain at the perovskite surface and local structural distortions that may favor passivation of surface defects. In contrast, the room-temperature dynamics of Li interstitials result in an overall expansion of lattice volume, which may be linked to more facile lattice degradation.

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