Efficient and Stable Perovskite Solar Cells with a High Open-Circuit Voltage Over 1.2 V Achieved by a Dual-Side Passivation Layer

  • Ju Hyeon Kim
  • , Yong Ryun Kim
  • , Juae Kim
  • , Chang Mok Oh
  • , In Wook Hwang
  • , Jehan Kim
  • , Stefan Zeiske
  • , Taeyoon Ki
  • , Sooncheol Kwon
  • , Heejoo Kim
  • , Ardalan Armin
  • , Hongsuk Suh
  • , Kwanghee Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

42 Scopus citations

Abstract

Suppressing nonradiative recombination at the interface between the organometal halide perovskite (PVK) and the charge-transport layer (CTL) is crucial for improving the efficiency and stability of PVK-based solar cells (PSCs). Here, a new bathocuproine (BCP)-based nonconjugated polyelectrolyte (poly-BCP) is synthesized and this is introduced as a “dual-side passivation layer” between the tin oxide (SnO2) CTL and the PVK absorber. Poly-BCP significantly suppresses both bulk and interfacial nonradiative recombination by passivating oxygen-vacancy defects from the SnO2 side and simultaneously scavenges ionic defects from the other (PVK) side. Therefore, PSCs with poly-BCP exhibits a high power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 24.4% and a high open-circuit voltage of 1.21 V with a reduced voltage loss (PVK bandgap of 1.56 eV). The non-encapsulated PSCs also show excellent long-term stability by retaining 93% of the initial PCE after 700 h under continuous 1-sun irradiation in nitrogen atmosphere conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2205268
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume34
Issue number41
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Oct 2022

Keywords

  • interface engineering
  • nonconjugated polymers
  • nonradiative recombination
  • organometal halide perovskites
  • perovskite solar cells

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