4.8 Article

Light-Triggered Sustainable Defect-Passivation for Stable Perovskite Photovoltaics

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 50, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202205338

Keywords

light-triggered response; sustainable passivation; photostabilities; perovskite solar cells

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62075148, 52073197]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BE2022026-2, BK20201413, BK20211314]
  3. Suzhou science and technology plan project [N321461821, ST202212]
  4. Suzhou Key Laboratory of Functional Nano & Soft Materials, Collaborative Innovation Center of Suzhou Nano Science Technology
  5. 111 Project
  6. Joint International Research Laboratory of Carbon-Based Functional Materials and Devices
  7. Soochow University Tang Scholar

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In perovskite photovoltaics, spiropyran is utilized as a light-triggered, self-healing passivation site to achieve continuous defect repair and enhance the stability of power conversion efficiency.
The generation of photoinduced defects and freely moving halogen ions is dynamically updated in real time. Accordingly, most reported strategies are static and short-term, which make their improvements in photostability very limited. Therefore, seeking new passivation strategies to match the dynamic characteristics of defect generation is very urgent. Without newly generated defects, a passivation molecule should exist in the configuration that would not become the initiation sites for defect generation. With newly generated defects, the passivation molecule should transfer into the other configuration that possesses the passivation sites. Herein, a classical photoisomeric molecule, spiropyran, is adopted, whose pre- and post-isomeric forms meet the requirements for two different configurations, to realize the state transition once the photoinduced defects appear during subsequent operation and dynamic capture for continuous renewal of defects. Consequently, spiropyrans work as light-triggered and self-healing sustainable passivation sites to realize continuous defect repair. The target devices retain 93% and 99% of their initial power conversion efficiencies after 456 h aging under ultraviolet illumination and 1200 h aging under full-spectrum illumination, respectively. This work provides a novel concept of sustainable passivation strategy to realize continuous defect-passivation and film-healing in perovskite photovoltaics.

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