High Stability of Photovoltaic Cells with Phenethylammonium Iodide-Passivated Perovskite Layers and Printable Copper Phthalocyanine-Modified Carbon Electrodes.

2021 
Defects caused by the structural disorder of perovskites and voltage loss resulting from mismatched band structure are important issues to address to improve the performance of carbon-based perovskite solar cells. Different from the conventional approaches of additive-based passivation of perovskite precursors and introducing a hole-transport layer between the perovskite layer and carbon electrode, herein we report a defect-healing method using phenethylammonium iodide (PEAI) treatment and band-structure modification using high-work-function inorganic copper phthalocyanine (CuPc). Because of its relatively smoother surfaces and lower defect content, the optimized device after PEAI-based passivation of the perovskite achieves a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 11.74%. The PCE is further raised to 13.41% through the auxiliary energy-level matching and high hole extraction abilities of the CuPc-modified carbon electrode. The best-performing device exhibits excellent moisture tolerance and thermal stability with minor current density-voltage hysteresis.
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