Interfacial Molecular Doping of Metal Halide Perovskites for Highly Efficient Solar Cells.
Qi JiangZhenyi NiGuiying XuYun LinPeter N RuddRongming XueYaowen LiYongfang LiYongli GaoJinsong HuangPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2020)
Tailoring the doping of semiconductors in heterojunction solar cells shows tremendous success in enhancing the performance of many types of inorganic solar cells, while it is found challenging in perovskite solar cells because of the difficulty in doping perovskites in a controllable way. Here, a small molecule of 4,4',4″,4″'-(pyrazine-2,3,5,6-tetrayl) tetrakis (N,N-bis(4-methoxyphenyl) aniline) (PT-TPA) which can effectively p-dope the surface of FAx MA1- x PbI3 (FA: HC(NH2 )2 ; MA: CH3 NH3 ) perovskite films is reported. The intermolecular charge transfer property of PT-TPA forms a stabilized resonance structure to accept electrons from perovskites. The doping effect increases perovskite dark conductivity and carrier concentration by up to 4737 times. Computation shows that electrons in the first two layers of octahedral cages in perovskites are transferred to PT-TPA. After applying PT-TPA into perovskite solar cells, the doping-induced band bending in perovskite effectively facilitates hole extraction to hole transport layer and expels electrons toward cathode side, which reduces the charge recombination there. The optimized devices demonstrate an increased photovoltage from 1.12 to 1.17 V and an efficiency of 23.4% from photocurrent scanning with a stabilized efficiency of 22.9%. The findings demonstrate that molecular doping is an effective route to control the interfacial charge recombination in perovskite solar cells which is in complimentary to broadly applied defect passivation techniques.