Oxidation-resistant all-perovskite tandem solar cells in substrate configuration.
Yurui WangRenxing LinXiaoyu WangChenshuaiyu LiuYameen AhmedZilong HuangZhibin ZhangHongjiang LiMei ZhangYuan GaoHaowen LuoPu WuHan GaoXuntian ZhengManya LiZhou LiuWenchi KongLudong LiKai-Hui LiuMakhsud I SaidaminovLijun ZhangHairen TanPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
The commonly-used superstrate configuration (depositing front subcell first and then depositing back subcell) in all-perovskite tandem solar cells is disadvantageous for long-term stability due to oxidizable narrow-bandgap perovskite assembled last and easily exposable to air. Here we reverse the processing order and demonstrate all-perovskite tandems in a substrate configuration (depositing back subcell first and then depositing front subcell) to bury oxidizable narrow-bandgap perovskite deep in the device stack. By using guanidinium tetrafluoroborate additive in wide-bandgap perovskite subcell, we achieve an efficiency of 25.3% for the substrate-configured all-perovskite tandem cells. The unencapsulated devices exhibit no performance degradation after storage in dry air for 1000 hours. The substrate configuration also widens the choice of flexible substrates: we achieve 24.1% and 20.3% efficient flexible all-perovskite tandem solar cells on copper-coated polyethylene naphthalene and copper metal foil, respectively. Substrate configuration offers a promising route to unleash the commercial potential of all-perovskite tandem solar cells.