Interfacial
trap-assisted non-radiative recombination and residual
stress impede the further increase of power conversion efficiency
(PCE) and stability of the methylammonium-free (MA-free) perovskite
solar cells (PSCs). Here, we report an interfacial defect passivation
and stress release strategy through employing the multi-active-site
Lewis base ligand (i.e., (5-mercapto-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-ylthio)acetic
acid (MTDAA)) to modify the surface and grain boundaries (GBs) of
MA-free perovskite films. Both experimental and theoretical results
confirm strong chemical interactions between multiple active sites
in the MTDAA molecule and undercoordinated Pb2+ at the
surface or GBs of perovskite films. It is demonstrated theoretically
that multi-active-site adsorption is more favorable thermodynamically
as compared to single-active-site adsorption, regardless of PbI2 termination and formamidinium iodide (FAI) termination types.
MTDAA modification results in much reduced defect density, increased
carrier lifetime, and almost thoroughly released interfacial residual
stress. Upon MTDAA passivation, the PCE is boosted from 20.26% to
21.92%. The unencapsulated device modified by MTDAA maintains 99%
of its initial PCE after aging under the relative humidity range of
10–20% for 1776 h, and 91% after aging at 60 °C for 1032
h.
mixture at 150 °C for 2 min and then Cs-oleate solution (0.4 mL in ODE) was quickly injected. After 5 s, the reaction mixture was cooled by the ice-water bath to room temperature.
Organic–inorganic hybrid perovskite solar cells with a CdSe quantum dot/PCBM composite as an electron transport layer are reported by materials synthesis, characterization, device fabrication, performance measurements and large-scale first-principles calculations.
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