Organizing Uniform Phase Distribution in Methylammonium-Free 1.77 eV Wide-Bandgap Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells

Small. 2023 Oct;19(40):e2303213. doi: 10.1002/smll.202303213. Epub 2023 Jun 3.

Abstract

Disordered crystallization and poor phase stability of mixed halide perovskite films are still the main factors that compromise the performance of inverted wide bandgap (WBG; 1.77 eV) perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Great difficulties are evidenced due to the very different crystallization rates between I- and Br-based perovskite components through DMSO-alone assisted anti-solvent process. Here, a zwitterionic additive strategy is reported for finely regulating the crystal growth of Cs0.2 FA0.8 Pb(I0.6 Br0.4 )3 , thereby obtaining high-performance PSCs. The aminoethanesulfonic acid (AESA) is introduced to form hydrogen bonds and strong PbO bonds with perovskite precursors, realizing the complete coordination with both the organic (FAI) and inorganic (CsI, PbI2 , PbBr2 ) components, balancing their complexation effects, and realizing AESA-guided fast nucleation and retarded crystallization processes. This treatment substantially promotes homogeneous crystal growth of I- and Br-based perovskite components. Besides, this uniformly distributed AESA passivates the defects and inhibits the photo-induced halide segregation effectively. This strategy generates a record efficiency of 19.66%, with a Voc of 1.25 V and FF of 83.7% for an MA-free WBG p-i-n device at 1.77 eV. The unencapsulated devices display impressive humidity stability at 30 ± 5% RH for 1000 h and much improved continuous operation stability at MPP for 300 h.

Keywords: halide distribution; homogeneous crystallization process; inverted wide-bandgap perovskite solar cells; photo-induced halide segregation; zwitterionic molecules.