Login / Signup

Single-crystalline TiO 2 nanoparticles for stable and efficient perovskite modules.

Yong DingBin DingHiroyuki KandaOnovbaramwen Jennifer UsioboThibaut GalletZhenhai YangYan LiuHao HuangJiang ShengCheng LiuYi YangValentin Ianis Emmanuel QuelozXianfu ZhangJean-Nicolas AudinotAlex RedingerWei DangEdoardo MosconicWen LuoFilippo De AngelisMingkui WangPatrick DörflingerMelina ArmerValentin SchmidRui WangKeith G BrooksJihuai WuVladimir DyakonovGuanjun YangSongyuan DaiPaul J DysonMohammad Kahaj Khaja Nazeeruddin
Published in: Nature nanotechnology (2022)
Despite the remarkable progress in power conversion efficiency of perovskite solar cells, going from individual small-size devices into large-area modules while preserving their commercial competitiveness compared with other thin-film solar cells remains a challenge. Major obstacles include reduction of both the resistive losses and intrinsic defects in the electron transport layers and the reliable fabrication of high-quality large-area perovskite films. Here we report a facile solvothermal method to synthesize single-crystalline TiO 2 rhombohedral nanoparticles with exposed (001) facets. Owing to their low lattice mismatch and high affinity with the perovskite absorber, their high electron mobility and their lower density of defects, single-crystalline TiO 2 nanoparticle-based small-size devices achieve an efficiency of 24.05% and a fill factor of 84.7%. The devices maintain about 90% of their initial performance after continuous operation for 1,400 h. We have fabricated large-area modules and obtained a certified efficiency of 22.72% with an active area of nearly 24 cm 2 , which represents the highest-efficiency modules with the lowest loss in efficiency when scaling up.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
  • network analysis
  • visible light
  • perovskite solar cells
  • high efficiency
  • ionic liquid
  • walled carbon nanotubes