High-Efficiency Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells via In Situ Passivation Directed Crystallization.
Yanchun HuangKangrong YanXinjiang WangBiao LiBenfang NiuMinxing YanZiqiu ShenKun ZhouYanjun FangXuegong YuHongzheng ChenLijun ZhangChang-Zhi LiPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
Lead halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have emerged as one of the influential photovoltaic technologies with promising cost-effectiveness. Though with mild processabilities to massive production, inverted PSCs have long suffered from inferior photovoltaic performances due to intractable defective states at boundaries and interfaces. Herein, an in situ passivation (ISP) method is presented to effectively adjust crystal growth kinetics and obtain the well-orientated perovskite films with the passivated boundaries and interfaces, successfully enabled the new access of high-performance inverted PSCs. The study unravels that the strong yet anisotropic ISP additive adsorption between different facets and the accompanied additive engineering yield the high-quality (111)-orientated perovskite crystallites with superior photovoltaic properties. The ISP-derived inverted perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have achieved remarkable power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of 26.7% (certified as 26.09% at a 5.97 mm 2 active area) and 24.5% (certified as 23.53% at a 1.28 cm 2 active area), along with decent operational stabilities.