4.8 Article

Multifunctional Ion-Lock Interface Layer Achieved by Solid-Solid Contact Approach for Stabilizing Perovskite Solar Cells

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 26, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202200473

Keywords

interface; ion lock; Nafion; planar perovskite solar cells; stability

Funding

  1. University Grant Council of the University of Hong Kong [202011159254]
  2. General Research Fund [17200518, 17201819, 17211220, 17200021]
  3. Research Grants Council (RGC) of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China [C7035-20G, C5037-18G]
  4. Peacock Team Project from Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee [KQTD2015033110182370]
  5. Shenzhen Engineering R&D Center for Flexible Solar Cells project from Shenzhen Development and Reform Committee [2019-126]
  6. Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2019B1515120083]

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The presence of interface defects in perovskite solar cells hinders their efficiency and stability. However, a multifunctional ion-lock layer can effectively reduce these defects, adjust the work function, and improve the performance and stability of the cells.
It has been a hindering issue in perovskite solar cells that the interfaces between the perovskite and charge transport layers show significantly high concentrations of defects with an amount about 100 times more than inside the bulk perovskite layer. The issue causes substantial reduction in both the efficiency and stability of the devices. Herein, a solid-solid contact approach is demonstrated to realize a multifunctional ion-lock layer with strong chemical interaction to the perovskite layer. The multifunctional ion-lock layer remarkably suppresses the interface defects and tunes the work function, contributing to promoting the carrier extraction, increasing the open-circuit voltage, and enlarging the photocurrent. In addition, the multifunctional ion-lock layer successfully locks ions from movement and thus improves the stability of the devices. Finally, with a multifunctional ion-lock layer, the perovskite solar cells deliver an efficiency of up to 23.13% along with desirable long-term operational, storage, and humidity stability. Consequently, the work offers guidelines for establishing defect-suppressed interfaces between perovskites and hole transport layers.

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