Strong performance enhancement in lead-halide perovskite solar cells through rapid, atmospheric deposition of n-type buffer layer oxides

2020 
Abstract Thin (approximately 10 nm) oxide buffer layers grown over lead-halide perovskite device stacks are critical for protecting the perovskite against mechanical and environmental damage. However, the limited perovskite stability restricts the processing methods and temperatures (≤110 °C) that can be used to deposit the oxide overlayers, with the latter limiting the electronic properties of the oxides achievable. In this work, we demonstrate an alternative to existing methods that can grow pinhole-free TiOx (x ∼ 2) films with the requisite thickness in 2%. Likewise, when AP-CVD SnOx (x ∼ 2) is grown directly on the perovskite, there is also minimal structural damage to the underlying perovskite layer. The SnOx layer is pinhole-free and conformal. When used to cover perovskite devices with a PC61BM electron transport layer, shunting due to the pinholes in the spin-coated PC61BM is reduced, resulting in increases in the steady-state efficiency from 16.5% (no SnOx) to 19.4% (60 nm SnOx), with fill factors reaching 84%. This work shows AP-CVD to be a versatile technique for growing oxides on thermally-sensitive materials.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    64
    References
    16
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []