Interface engineering of highly efficient perovskite solar cells

Huanping Zhou(California NanoSystems Institute), Qi Chen(California NanoSystems Institute), Gang Li(University of California, Los Angeles), Song Luo(California NanoSystems Institute), Tze‐Bin Song(California NanoSystems Institute), Hsin‐Sheng Duan(California NanoSystems Institute), Ziruo Hong(University of California, Los Angeles), Jingbi You(University of California, Los Angeles), Yongsheng Liu(California NanoSystems Institute), Yang Yang(California NanoSystems Institute)
Science
July 31, 2014
Cited by 6,574

Abstract

Advancing perovskite solar cell technologies toward their theoretical power conversion efficiency (PCE) requires delicate control over the carrier dynamics throughout the entire device. By controlling the formation of the perovskite layer and careful choices of other materials, we suppressed carrier recombination in the absorber, facilitated carrier injection into the carrier transport layers, and maintained good carrier extraction at the electrodes. When measured via reverse bias scan, cell PCE is typically boosted to 16.6% on average, with the highest efficiency of ~19.3% in a planar geometry without antireflective coating. The fabrication of our perovskite solar cells was conducted in air and from solution at low temperatures, which should simplify manufacturing of large-area perovskite devices that are inexpensive and perform at high levels.


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