A small amount of a radical‐bearing redox‐active polymer, poly(1‐oxy‐2,2,6,6‐tetramethylpiperidin‐4‐yl methacrylate) (PTMA), incorporated into the photovoltaic organo‐lead halide perovskite layer significantly enhanced durability of both the perovskite layer and its solar cell and even exposure to ambient air or oxygen. PTMA acted as an eliminating agent of the superoxide anion radical formed upon light irradiation on the layer, which can react with the perovskite compound and decompose it to lead halide. A cell fabricated with a PTMA‐incorporated perovskite layer and a hole‐transporting polytriarylamine layer gave a photovoltaic conversion efficiency of 18.8 % (18.2 % for the control without PTMA). The photovoltaic current was not reduced in the presence of PTMA in the perovskite layer probably owing to a carrier conductivity of PTMA. The incorporated PTMA also worked as a water‐repelling coating for providing humidity‐resistance to the organo‐lead halide perovskite layer.
Homogeneous layer
formation on textured silicon substrates is essential
for the fabrication of highly efficient monolithic perovskite silicon
tandem solar cells. From all well-known techniques for the fabrication
of perovskite solar cells (PSCs), the evaporation method offers the
highest degree of freedom for layer-by-layer deposition independent
of the substrate’s roughness or texturing. Hole-transporting
polymers with high hole mobility and structural stability have been
used as effective hole-transporting materials (HTMs) of PSCs. However,
the strong intermolecular interactions of the polymers do not allow
for a layer formation via the evaporation method, which is a big challenge
for the perovskite community. Herein, we first applied a hole-transporting
terthiophene polymer (PTTh) as an HTM for evaporated PSCs via an in
situ vapor-phase polymerization using iodine (I2) as a
sublimable oxidative agent. PTTh showed high hole mobility of 1.2
× 10–3 cm2/(V s) and appropriate
energy levels as HTM in PSCs (E
HOMO =
−5.3 eV and E
LUMO = −3.3
eV). The PSCs with the in situ vapor-phase polymerized PTTh hole-transporting
layer and a co-evaporated perovskite layer exhibited a photovoltaic
conversion efficiency of 5.9%, as a proof of concept, and high cell
stability over time. Additionally, the polymer layer could fully cover
the pyramidal structure of textured silicon substrates and was identified
as an effective hole-transporting material for perovskite silicon
tandem solar cells by optical simulation.
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