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The current understanding of the crystallization, morphology evolution, and phase stability of wide‐bandgap hybrid perovskite thin films is very limited, as much of the community's focus is on lower bandgap systems. Herein, the crystallization behavior and film formation of a wide and tunable bandgap MAPbBr3
− x Clx system are investigated, and its formation and phase stability are contrasted to the classical MAPbI3− x Brx case. A multiprobe in situ characterization approach consisting of synchrotron‐based grazing incidence wide‐angle X‐ray scattering and laboratory‐based time‐resolved UV–Vis absorbance measurements is utilized to show that all wide‐bandgap perovskite compositions of MAPbBr3− x Clx studied (0 <x < 3) crystallize the same way: the perovskite phase forms directly from the colloidal sol state and forms a solid film in the cubic structure. This results in significantly improved alloying and phase stability of these compounds compared with MAPbI3− x Brx systems. The phase transformation pathway is direct and excludes solvated phases, in contrast to methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3). The films benefit from antisolvent dripping to overcome the formation of discontinuous layers and enable device integration. Pin‐hole‐free MAPbBr3− x Clx hybrid perovskite thin films with a tunable bandgap are, thus, integrated into working single‐junction solar cell devices and achieve a tunable open‐circuit voltage as high as 1.6 V. -
Abstract Perovskite solar cells increasingly feature mixed‐halide mixed‐cation compounds (FA1−
x −y MAx Csy PbI3−z Brz) as photovoltaic absorbers, as they enable easier processing and improved stability. Here, the underlying reasons for ease of processing are revealed. It is found that halide and cation engineering leads to a systematic widening of the anti‐solvent processing window for the fabrication of high‐quality films and efficient solar cells. This window widens from seconds, in the case of single cation/halide systems (e.g., MAPbI3, FAPbI3, and FAPbBr3), to several minutes for mixed systems. In situ X‐ray diffraction studies reveal that the processing window is closely related to the crystallization of the disordered sol–gel and to the number of crystalline byproducts; the processing window therefore depends directly on the precise cation/halide composition. Moreover, anti‐solvent dripping is shown to promote the desired perovskite phase with careful formulation. The processing window of perovskite solar cells, as defined by the latest time the anti‐solvent drip yields efficient solar cells, broadened with the increasing complexity of cation/halide content. This behavior is ascribed to kinetic stabilization of sol–gel state through cation/halide engineering. This provides guidelines for designing new formulations, aimed at formation of the perovskite phase, ultimately resulting in high‐efficiency perovskite solar cells produced with ease and with high reproducibility.