4.8 Article

Surface reaction for efficient and stable inverted perovskite solar cells

Journal

NATURE
Volume 611, Issue 7935, Pages 278-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05268-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy [DE-AC36-08GO28308]
  2. Alliance for Sustainable Energy, Limited Liability Company (LLC)
  3. National Renewable Energy Laboratory
  4. Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Office of Science within the US Department of Energy
  5. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and located at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory
  6. 3-APy surface treatment
  7. corresponding device fabrication and characterizations [DE-FOA-0002064, DE-EE0008790]
  8. Advanced Perovskite Cells and Modules programme of the National Center for Photovoltaics - US Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Solar Energy Technologies Office
  9. California Energy Commission EPIC programme [EPC-19-004]
  10. National Science Foundation through the UC Irvine Materials Research Science and Engineering Center [DMR-2011967]
  11. National Science Foundation Major Research Instrumentation Program [CHE-1338173]

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In this study, a reactive surface engineering approach was used to enhance the performance of perovskite solar cells with an inverted structure. The resulting p-i-n solar cells showed a high power conversion efficiency of over 25% and remained stable after long-term operation under extreme conditions.
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with an inverted structure (often referred to as the p-i-n architecture) are attractive for future commercialization owing to their easily scalable fabrication, reliable operation and compatibility with a wide range of perovskite-based tandem device architectures(1,2). However, the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of p-i-n PSCs falls behind that of n-i-p (or normal) structure counterparts(3-6). This large performance gap could undermine efforts to adopt p-i-n architectures, despite their other advantages. Given the remarkable advances in perovskite bulk materials optimization over the past decade, interface engineering has become the most important strategy to push PSC performance to its limit(7,8). Here we report a reactive surface engineering approach based on a simple post-growth treatment of 3-(aminomethyl)pyridine (3-APy) on top of a perovskite thin film. First, the 3-APy molecule selectively reacts with surface formamidinium ions, reducing perovskite surface roughness and surface potential fluctuations associated with surface steps and terraces. Second, the reaction product on the perovskite surface decreases the formation energy of charged iodine vacancies, leading to effective n-type doping with a reduced work function in the surface region. With this reactive surface engineering, the resulting p-i-n PSCs obtained a PCE of over 25 per cent, along with retaining 87 per cent of the initial PCE after over 2,400 hours of 1-sun operation at about 55 degrees Celsius in air.

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