Metal halide perovskites (MHPs) have gained attention as a viable alternative to crystalline silicon solar cells, offering comparable power conversion efficiencies exceeding 26%. However, their large-scale adoption remains limited by several challenges, most notably, the reliance on toxic post-transition metals like lead. While efforts have been made to replace lead with less hazardous metals such as tin, a comprehensive evaluation of the environmental trade-offs has often been overlooked. This study presents, for the first time, a quantitative comparison of the environmental and human health impacts associated with lead and tin precursors in the fabrication of two benchmark perovskite active layers: MAPbI3 and MASnI3. The results show that tin accounts for 27.6% of the total manufacturing impact, compared to only 18.8% for lead. The endpoint single score analysis further highlights that tin is 1.6–1.8 times more impactful than lead. Based on the LCAdata, atin-based devicewouldat least require a PCE ofca.42% to match the environmental and PCE performance of its lead-based counterpart.

Lead vs. tin in the preparation of metal halide perovskites: is this the real fight for the future of solar energy?

Campana, Filippo
Methodology
;
Lanari, Daniela
Methodology
;
De Angelis, Filippo;Vaccaro, Luigi
Conceptualization
2025

Abstract

Metal halide perovskites (MHPs) have gained attention as a viable alternative to crystalline silicon solar cells, offering comparable power conversion efficiencies exceeding 26%. However, their large-scale adoption remains limited by several challenges, most notably, the reliance on toxic post-transition metals like lead. While efforts have been made to replace lead with less hazardous metals such as tin, a comprehensive evaluation of the environmental trade-offs has often been overlooked. This study presents, for the first time, a quantitative comparison of the environmental and human health impacts associated with lead and tin precursors in the fabrication of two benchmark perovskite active layers: MAPbI3 and MASnI3. The results show that tin accounts for 27.6% of the total manufacturing impact, compared to only 18.8% for lead. The endpoint single score analysis further highlights that tin is 1.6–1.8 times more impactful than lead. Based on the LCAdata, atin-based devicewouldat least require a PCE ofca.42% to match the environmental and PCE performance of its lead-based counterpart.
2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/1603514
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