| Literature DB >> 28438016 |
Yuqin Liao1,2, Hefei Liu1, Wenjia Zhou1, Dongwen Yang3, Yuequn Shang1, Zhifang Shi1, Binghan Li1, Xianyuan Jiang1, Lijun Zhang3, Li Na Quan4, Rafael Quintero-Bermudez4, Brandon R Sutherland4, Qixi Mi1, Edward H Sargent4, Zhijun Ning1.
Abstract
The low toxicity and a near-ideal choice of bandgap make tin perovskite an attractive alternative to lead perovskite in low cost solar cells. However, the development of Sn perovskite solar cells has been impeded by their extremely poor stability when exposed to oxygen. We report low-dimensional Sn perovskites that exhibit markedly enhanced air stability in comparison with their 3D counterparts. The reduced degradation under air exposure is attributed to the improved thermodynamic stability after dimensional reduction, the encapsulating organic ligands, and the compact perovskite film preventing oxygen ingress. We then explore these highly oriented low-dimensional Sn perovskite films in solar cells. The perpendicular growth of the perovskite domains between electrodes allows efficient charge carrier transport, leading to power conversion efficiencies of 5.94% without the requirement of further device structure engineering. We tracked the performance of unencapsulated devices over 100 h and found no appreciable decay in efficiency. These findings raise the prospects of pure Sn perovskites for solar cells application.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28438016 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b01815
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419