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Yicheng Zhao

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

ORCID: 0000-0002-8248-7021

Publishes on Perovskite Materials and Applications, Conducting polymers and applications, Quantum Dots Synthesis And Properties. 83 papers and 9.6k citations.

83Publications
9.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Efficient and stable solution-processed planar perovskite solar cells via contact passivation
Hairen Tan, Ankit Jain, Oleksandr Voznyy et al.|Science|2017
Cited by 2.3kOpen Access

colloidal nanocrystal film that mitigates interfacial recombination and improves interface binding in low-temperature planar solar cells. We fabricated solar cells with certified efficiencies of 20.1 and 19.5% for active areas of 0.049 and 1.1 square centimeters, respectively, achieved via low-temperature solution processing. Solar cells with efficiency greater than 20% retained 90% (97% after dark recovery) of their initial performance after 500 hours of continuous room-temperature operation at their maximum power point under 1-sun illumination (where 1 sun is defined as the standard illumination at AM1.5, or 1 kilowatt/square meter).

A polymer scaffold for self-healing perovskite solar cells
Yicheng Zhao, Jing Wei, Heng Li et al.|Nature Communications|2016
Cited by 660Open Access

Advancing of the lead halide perovskite solar cells towards photovoltaic market demands large-scale devices of high-power conversion efficiency, high reproducibility and stability via low-cost fabrication technology, and in particular resistance to humid environment for long-time operation. Here we achieve uniform perovskite film based on a novel polymer-scaffold architecture via a mild-temperature process. These solar cells exhibit efficiency of up to ∼ 16% with small variation. The unencapsulated devices retain high output for up to 300 h in highly humid environment (70% relative humidity). Moreover, they show strong humidity resistant and self-healing behaviour, recovering rapidly after removing from water vapour. Not only the film can self-heal in this case, but the corresponding devices can present power conversion efficiency recovery after the water vapour is removed. Our work demonstrates the value of cheap, long chain and hygroscopic polymer scaffold in perovskite solar cells towards commercialization.

Quantification of light-enhanced ionic transport in lead iodide perovskite thin films and its solar cell applications
Yicheng Zhao, Wenke Zhou, Xu Zhou et al.|Light Science & Applications|2016
Cited by 467Open Access

Ionic transport in organometal halide perovskites is of vital importance because it dominates anomalous phenomena in perovskite solar cells, from hysteresis to switchable photovoltaic effects. However, excited state ionic transport under illumination has remained elusive, although it is essential for understanding the unusual light-induced effects (light-induced self-poling, photo-induced halide segregation and slow photoconductivity response) in organometal halide perovskites for optoelectronic applications. Here, we quantitatively demonstrate light-enhanced ionic transport in CH3NH3PbI3 over a wide temperature range of 17–295 K, which reveals a reduction in ionic transport activation energy by approximately a factor of five (from 0.82 to 0.15 eV) under illumination. The pure ionic conductance is obtained by separating it from the electronic contribution in cryogenic galvanostatic and voltage-current measurements. On the basis of these findings, we design a novel light-assisted method of catalyzing ionic interdiffusion between CH3NH3I and PbI2 stacking layers in sequential deposition perovskite synthesis. X-ray diffraction patterns indicate a significant reduction of PbI2 residue in the optimized CH3NH3PbI3 thin film produced via light-assisted sequential deposition, and the resulting solar cell efficiency is increased by over 100% (7.5%–15.7%) with little PbI2 residue. This new method enables fine control of the reaction depth in perovskite synthesis and, in turn, supports light-enhanced ionic transport. Using light to excite ions in perovskite thin films can improve the conductivity and synthetic deposition of low-cost solar cells. Organometal halide perovskites have a suitable bandgap for photovoltaics and are compatible with solution processing, but tend to degrade after long exposure to sunlight. A team led by Qing Zhao from Peking University now reports that excited state ionic transport is the key to understanding perovskite’s poor photostability. Through video snapshots and quantitative conductivity extractions, their analysis revealed that illumination drops the energy barrier needed to activate ionic transport by almost five fold—an enhancement that may induce disorder of electronic structure in the solar cell over time. Intriguingly, the light-enhanced ionic transport can also catalyze removal of metal halide precipitates during thin film annealing in sequential deposition reaction, boosting the device efficiency from 7.5 to 15.7% after just 10 minutes of light exposure.

Perovskite seeding growth of formamidinium-lead-iodide-based perovskites for efficient and stable solar cells
Yicheng Zhao, Hairen Tan, Haifeng Yuan et al.|Nature Communications|2018
Cited by 410Open Access

Abstract Formamidinium-lead-iodide (FAPbI 3 )-based perovskites with bandgap below 1.55 eV are of interest for photovoltaics in view of their close-to-ideal bandgap. Record-performance FAPbI 3 -based solar cells have relied on fabrication via the sequential-deposition method; however, these devices exhibit unstable output under illumination due to the difficulty of incorporating cesium cations (stabilizer) in sequentially deposited films. Here we devise a perovskite seeding method that efficiently incorporates cesium and beneficially modulates perovskite crystallization. First, perovskite seed crystals are embedded in the PbI 2 film. The perovskite seeds serve as cesium sources and act as nuclei to facilitate crystallization during the formation of perovskite. Perovskite films with perovskite seeding growth exhibit a lowered trap density, and the resulting planar solar cells achieve stabilized efficiency of 21.5% with a high open-circuit voltage of 1.13 V and a fill factor that exceeds 80%. The Cs-containing FAPbI 3 -based devices show a striking improvement in operational stability and retain 60% of their initial efficiency after 140 h operation under one sun illumination.