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Perovskite Solar Cell Using Isonicotinic Acid as a Gap-Filling Self-Assembled Monolayer with High Photovoltaic Performance and Light Stability.

Takeyuki SekimotoTeruaki YamamotoFumito TakenoRyosuke NishikuboMaki HiraokaRyusuke UchidaToru NakamuraKenji KawanoAkinori SaekiYukihiro KanekoTaisuke Matsui
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
High photovoltaic performance and light stability are required for the practical outdoor use of lead-halide perovskite solar cells. To improve the light stability of perovskite solar cells, it is effective to introduce a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) between the carrier transport layer and the perovskite layer. Several alternative approaches in their molecular design and combination with multiple SAMs support high photovoltaic conversion efficiency (PCE). Herein, we report a new structure for improving both PCE and light stability, in which the surface of an electron transport layer (ETL) was modified by combining a fullerene-functionalized self-assembled monolayer (C 60 SAM) and a suitable gap-filling self-assembled monolayer (GFSAM). Small-sized GFSAMs can enter the gap space of the C 60 SAM and terminate the unterminated sites on the ETL surface. The best GFSAM in this study was formed using an isonicotinic acid solution. After a light stability test for 68 h at 50 °C under 1 sun illumination, the best cell with C 60 SAM and GFSAM showed a PCE of 18.68% with a retention rate of over 99%. Moreover, following outdoor exposure for six months, the cells with C 60 SAM and GFSAM exhibited almost unchanged PCE. From the valence band spectra of the ETLs obtained using hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, we confirmed a decrease in the offset at the ETL/perovskite interface owing to the additional GFSAM treatment on the C 60 SAM-modified ETL surface. Time-resolved microwave conductivity measurements demonstrated that the additional GFSAM improved electron extraction at the C 60 SAM-modified ETL/perovskite interface.
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