Enhanced Buried Interface Engineering for Efficient Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells Fabricated via Vapor-Solid Reaction.
Yichen DouPin LvZhangwei YuanWenjuan XiongJiace LiangYong PengGuijie LiangZhiliang KuPublished in: Small methods (2024)
Vapor-deposited inverted perovskite solar cells utilizing self-assembled monolayer (SAM) as hole transport material have gained significant attention for their high efficiencies and compatibility with silicon/perovskite monolithic tandem devices. However, as a small molecule, the SAM layer suffers low thermal tolerance in comparison with other metal oxide or polymers, rendering poor efficiency in solar device with high-temperature (> 160 °C) fabricating procedures. In this study, a dual modification approach involving AlO x and F-doped phenyltrimethylammonium bromide (F-PTABr) layers is introduced to enhance the buried interface. The AlO x dielectric layer improves the interface contact and prevents the upward diffusion of SAM molecules during the vapor-solid reaction at 170 °C, while the F-PTABr layer regulates crystal growth and reduces the interfacial defects. As a result, the AlO x /F-PTABr-treated perovskite film exhibits a homogeneous, pinhole-free morphology with improved crystal quality compared to the control films. This leads to a champion power conversion efficiency of 21.53% for the inverted perovskite solar cells. Moreover, the encapsulated devices maintained 90% of the initial efficiency after 600 h of ageing at 85 °C in air, demonstrating promising potential for silicon/perovskite tandem application.
Keyphrases
- perovskite solar cells
- room temperature
- small molecule
- solar cells
- high temperature
- ionic liquid
- high efficiency
- quantum dots
- working memory
- protein protein
- liquid chromatography
- newly diagnosed
- solid state
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- carbon nanotubes
- molecular dynamics simulations
- transition metal