4.5 Article

Suppression of Hysteresis Effects in Organohalide Perovskite Solar Cells

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS INTERFACES
Volume 4, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admi.201700007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Erlangen Graduate School in Advanced Optical Technologies (SAOT) at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  3. Cluster of Excellence Engineering of Advanced Materials (EAM)
  4. DFG research training group at Erlangen University [GRK1896]
  5. Joint Projects Helmholtz-Institute Erlangen Nurnberg (HI-ERN) [DBF01253]
  6. Aufbruch Bayern initiative of the state of Bavaria
  7. Bavarian Initiative Solar Technologies go Hybrid (SolTech)
  8. Solar Factory of the Future with the Energy Campus Nurnberg (EnCN)

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Thin-film solar cell based on hybrid perovskites shows excellent light-to-power conversion efficiencies exceeding 22%. However, the mixed ionic-electronic semiconductor hybrid perovskite exhibits many unusual properties such as slow photocurrent instabilities, hysteresis behavior, and low-frequency giant capacitance, which still question us so far. This study presents a direct surface functionalization of transparent conductive oxide electrode with an ultrathin approximate to 2 nm thick phosphonic acid based mixed C60/organic self-assembled monolayer (SAM) that significantly reduces hysteresis. Moreover, due to the strong phosphonates bonds with indium tin oxide (ITO) substrates, the SAM/ITO substrates also exhibit an excellent recyclability merit from the perspective of cost effectiveness. Impedance studies find the fingerprint of an ion-based diffusion process in the millisecond to second regime for TiO2-based devices, which, however, is not observed for SAM-based devices at these low frequencies. It is experimentally demonstrated that ion migration can be considerably suppressed by carefully engineering SAM interfaces, which allows effectively suppressing hysteresis and unstable diode behavior in the frequency regime between approximate to 1 and 100 Hz. It is suggested that a reduced density of ionic defects in combination with the absence of charge carrier accumulation at the interface is the main physical origin for the reduced hysteresis.

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