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Lead Iodide Redistribution Enables In Situ Passivation for Blading Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells with 24.5% Efficiency.

Xin WangJun FangSibo LiGuanshui XieDongxu LinHuan LiDaozeng WangNuanshan HuangHaichen PengLongbin Qiu
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Blade-coating stands out as an alternative for fabricating scalable perovskite solar cells. However, it demands special control of the precursor composition regarding nucleation and crystallization and currently exhibits lower performance than the spin-coating process. It is mainly the resulting film morphology and excess lead iodide (PbI 2 ) distribution that influences the optoelectronic properties. Here, the effectiveness of introducing N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) to regulate the structure of the perovskite layer and the redistribution of PbI 2 is found. The introduction of NMP leads to the accumulation of excess PbI 2 , mainly on the top surface, reducing residual PbI 2 at the perovskite buried interface. This not only facilitates the passivation of perovskite grain boundaries but also eliminates the potential degradation of the PbI 2 triggered by light illumination in the perovskite buried interface. The optimized NMP-modified inverted perovskite solar cell achieves a champion efficiency of 24.5%, among the highest reported blade-coated perovskite solar cells. Furthermore, 13.68 cm 2 blading perovskite solar modules are fabricated and demonstrate an efficiency of up to 20.4%. These findings underscore that with proper modulation of precursor composition, blade-coating can be a feasible and superior alternative for manufacturing high-quality perovskite films, paving the way for their large-scale applications in photovoltaic technology.
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