Dopant engineering for ZnO electron transport layer towards efficient perovskite solar cells.
Nurul Aliyah Zainal AbidinFaiz ArithN Syamimi NoorasidHafez SarkawiAhmad Nizamuddin Muhammad MustafaN E SafieA S Mohd ShahMohd Asyadi AzamPuvaneswaran ChelvanathanNowshad AminPublished in: RSC advances (2023)
The conventional electron transport layer (ETL) TiO 2 has been widely used in perovskite solar cells (PSCs), which have produced exceptional power conversion efficiencies (PCE), allowing the technology to be highly regarded and propitious. Nevertheless, the recent high demand for energy harvesters in wearable electronics, aerospace, and building integration has led to the need for flexible solar cells. However, the conventional TiO 2 ETL layer is less preferred, where a crystallization process at a temperature as high as 450 °C is required, which degrades the plastic substrate. Zinc oxide nanorods (ZnO NRs) as a simple and low-cost fabrication material may fulfil the need as an ETL, but they still suffer from low PCE due to atomic defect vacancy. To delve into the issue, several dopants have been reviewed as an additive to passivate or substitute the Zn 2+ vacancies, thus enhancing the charge transport mechanism. This work thereby unravels and provides a clear insight into dopant engineering in ZnO NRs ETL for PSC.