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Multi-functional Strategy: Ammonium Citrate-Modified SnO 2 ETL for Efficient and Stable Perovskite Solar Cells.

Wenqi ZengXiaofeng HeHongyu BianPengju GuoMeng WangCun Yun XuGaobo XuYuanxin ZhongDengcheng LuZdeněk SoferQun Liang SongSam Zhang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
The tin oxide (SnO 2 ) electron transport layer (ETL) plays a crucial role in perovskite solar cells (PSCs). However, the heterogeneous dispersion of commercial SnO 2 colloidal precursors is far from optimized, resulting in dissatisfied device performance with SnO 2 ETL. Herein, a multifunctional modification material, ammonium citrate (TAC), is used to modify the SnO 2 ETL, bringing four benefits: (1) due to the electrostatic interaction between TAC molecules and SnO 2 colloidal particles, more uniformly dispersed colloidal particles are obtained; (2) the TAC molecules distributed on the surface of SnO 2 provide nucleation sites for the perovskite film growth, promoting the vertical growth of the perovskite crystal; (3) TAC-doped SnO 2 shows higher electron conductivity and better film quality than pristine SnO 2 while offering better energy-level alignment with the perovskite layer; and (4) TAC has functional groups of C═O and N-H containing lone pair electrons, which can passivate the defects on the surface of SnO 2 and perovskite films through chemical bonding and inhibit the device hysteresis. In the end, the device based on TAC-doped ETL achieved an increased power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 21.58 from 19.75% of the reference without such treatment. Meanwhile, the PSCs using the TAC-doped SnO 2 as the ETL maintained 88% of their initial PCE after being stored for about 1000 h under dark conditions and controlled RH of 10-25%.
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