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The synergistic effect of co-solvent engineering and thermal engineering towards phase control two-dimensional perovskite solar cells

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Abstract Two-dimensional (2D) Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites with multiple quantum well structure have attracted extensive attention due to its superior ambient stability and rapid rise in efficiency for perovskite solar cells. For… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Two-dimensional (2D) Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites with multiple quantum well structure have attracted extensive attention due to its superior ambient stability and rapid rise in efficiency for perovskite solar cells. For 2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites (BA2(MA)n−1PbnI3n+1), the value of n determines the thickness of perovskite layers within each quantum well. For perovskite with low n phases, the device performance is hindered by formation of severe charge transfer barrier, acting as trap centers. Thus, it is favorable to prepare high performance 2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskite films with suppressed low n phases. Herein, in this work, the co-solvent engineering and thermal engineering strategy were investigated with optimized solvent ratios (DMF to DMSO) and substrate preheating temperature to suppress low n phases in 2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskite films. The results showed that with optimized co-solvent ratio of 1:3, the low n phases are considerably suppressed with largely increased perovskite grain size. This was characterized by the steady-state photoluminescence measurement excited from the perovskite film back side, achieving 8.87% photoelectric conversion efficiency. By further optimizing the substrate preheating temperature, the formation of low n phases was further suppressed as convinced by the photoluminescence spectra. With the combined approaches, the solar cell device performance was synergistically boosted up to 11.6% with negligible hysteresis and superior stability. This work reveals that the co-solvent engineering and thermal engineering strategy is a valuable approach for control the low n phase in 2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskites, which may bring broad interest for pursuing high performance 2D perovskite solar cells.

Keywords: solvent engineering; solar cells; perovskite solar; engineering; ruddlesden popper; low phases

Journal Title: Solar Energy
Year Published: 2020

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