Effect of Interfacial Molecular Orientation on Power Conversion Efficiency of Perovskite Solar Cells.
Minyu XiaoSuneel JoglekarXiaoxian ZhangJoshua JasenskyJialiu MaQingyu CuiL Jay GuoZhan ChenPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A wide variety of charge carrier dynamics, such as transport, separation, and extraction, occur at the interfaces of planar heterojunction solar cells. Such factors can affect the overall device performance. Therefore, understanding the buried interfacial molecular structure in various devices and the correlation between interfacial structure and function has become increasingly important. Current characterization techniques for thin films such as X-ray diffraction, cross section scanning electronmicroscopy, and UV-visible absorption spectroscopy are unable to provide the needed molecular structural information at buried interfaces. In this study, by controlling the structure of the hole transport layer (HTL) in a perovskite solar cell and applying a surface/interface-sensitive nonlinear vibrational spectroscopic technique (sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy (SFG)), we successfully probed the molecular structure at the buried interface and correlated its structural characteristics to solar cell performance. Here, an edge-on (normal to the interface) polythiophene (PT) interfacial molecular orientation at the buried perovskite (photoactive layer)/PT (HTL) interface showed more than two times the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of a lying down (tangential) PT interfacial orientation. The difference in interfacial molecular structure was achieved by altering the alkyl side chain length of the PT derivatives, where PT with a shorter alkyl side chain showed an edge-on interfacial orientation with a higher PCE than that of PT with a longer alkyl side chain. With similar band gap alignment and bulk structure within the PT layer, it is believed that the interfacial molecular structural variation (i.e., the orientation difference) of the various PT derivatives is the underlying cause of the difference in perovskite solar cell PCE.
Keyphrases
- perovskite solar cells
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- solar cells
- single molecule
- electron transfer
- single cell
- high resolution
- room temperature
- stem cells
- cell therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- mass spectrometry
- density functional theory
- liquid chromatography
- social media
- visible light
- molecular dynamics
- electron microscopy
- raman spectroscopy
- health information