Login / Signup

Two-dimensional perovskitoids enhance stability in perovskite solar cells.

Cheng LiuYi YangHao ChenIoannis SpanopoulosAbdulaziz S R BatiIsaiah W GilleyJianhua ChenAidan MaxwellBadri VishalRobert P ReynoldsTaylor E WigginsZaiwei WangChuying HuangJared FletcherYuan LiuLin X ChenStefaan De WolfBin ChenDing ZhengTobin J MarksAntonio FacchettiEdward H SargentMercouri G Kanatzidis
Published in: Nature (2024)
Two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) perovskite heterostructures have played a key role in advancing the performance of perovskite solar cells 1,2 . However, the migration of cations between 2D and 3D layers results in the disruption of octahedral networks, leading to degradation in performance over time 3,4 . We hypothesized that perovskitoids, with robust organic-inorganic networks enabled by edge- and face-sharing, could impede ion migration. We explored a set of perovskitoids of varying dimensionality and found that cation migration within perovskitoid-perovskite heterostructures was suppressed compared with the 2D-3D perovskite case. Increasing the dimensionality of perovskitoids improves charge transport when they are interfaced with 3D perovskite surfaces-this is the result of enhanced octahedral connectivity and out-of-plane orientation. The 2D perovskitoid (A6BfP) 8 Pb 7 I 22 (A6BfP: N-aminohexyl-benz[f]-phthalimide) provides efficient passivation of perovskite surfaces and enables uniform large-area perovskite films. Devices based on perovskitoid-perovskite heterostructures achieve a certified quasi-steady-state power conversion efficiency of 24.6% for centimetre-area perovskite solar cells. We removed the fragile hole transport layers and showed stable operation of the underlying perovskitoid-perovskite heterostructure at 85 °C for 1,250 h for encapsulated large-area devices in ambient air.
Keyphrases