| Literature DB >> 28931833 |
Xiongfeng Lin1,2, Askhat N Jumabekov3, Niraj N Lal1,3, Alexander R Pascoe1, Daniel E Gómez3,4, Noel W Duffy5, Anthony S R Chesman3,6, Kallista Sears3, Maxime Fournier7, Yupeng Zhang1,8, Qiaoliang Bao1, Yi-Bing Cheng1,6, Leone Spiccia7, Udo Bach9,10,11,12.
Abstract
Hybrid organic-inorganic halide perovskites are low-cost solution-processable solar cell materials with photovoltaic properties that rival those of crystalline silicon. The perovskite films are typically sandwiched between thin layers of hole and electron transport materials, which efficiently extract photogenerated charges. This affords high-energy conversion efficiencies but results in significant performance and fabrication challenges. Herein we present a simple charge transport layer-free perovskite solar cell, comprising only a perovskite layer with two interdigitated gold back-contacts. Charge extraction is achieved via self-assembled monolayers and their associated dipole fields at the metal-perovskite interface. Photovoltages of ~600 mV generated by self-assembled molecular monolayer modified perovskite solar cells are equivalent to the built-in potential generated by individual dipole layers. Efficient charge extraction results in photocurrents of up to 12.1 mA cm-2 under simulated sunlight, despite a large electrode spacing.Simplified device concepts may become important for the development of low cost photovoltaics. Lin et al. report solar cells based on interdigitated gold back-contacts and metal halide perovskites where charge extraction is assisted via a dipole field generated by self-assembled molecular monolayers.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28931833 PMCID: PMC5606993 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00588-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Kelvin-probe-force-microscopy of an interdigitated gold microelectrode array during molecular modification. Contact potential difference (CPD) maps across sets of interdigitated fingers and illustrations of the KPFM imaging experiment for an unmodified IDA a + b, an IDA after exposure to 4-methoxythiophenol (OMeTP) and its subsequent electrochemical desorption from electrode “b” c + d, and an IDA after the final modification step with 4-chlorothiophenol (ClTP) e + f
Fig. 2Back-contact metal-perovskite-metal solar cells. a Schematic energy band diagram of a metal-perovskite-metal solar cell at thermal equilibrium in the dark. The work function of the methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3) perovskite () is situated between those of the metal electrodes “a” () and “b” (). The overall built-in potential of the solar cell is equal to the sum of the built-in potentials at the metal-perovskite contacts. corresponds to the electron affinity of MAPbI3. b Cross-section diagram of a dipole self-assembled monolayer (SAM) modified back-contact gold-perovskite-gold solar cell. Electrode “a” (anode, left) is modified with a molecular monolayer of 4-methoxythiophenol (OMeTP) with a molecular dipole of −2.67D. Electrode “b” (cathode, right) is modified with a monolayer of 4-chlorothiophenol (ClTP) with a molecular dipole of + 1.41 D
Fig. 3Photovoltaic properties of self-assembled monolayer modified back-contact perovskite solar cells. a J–V curves of a dipole-modified gold-perovskite-gold bc-PSC measured under standard solar irradiation (AM 1.5 G, 1000 W m−2), reverse scan (solid blue, encapsulated; solid red, unencapsulated) and forward scan (dashed blue, encapsulated, dashed red, unencapsulated). b Spectral response (External quantum efficiency – EQE, solid line) and the corresponding integrated short-circuit current density (dashed line) of a SAM-modified PSC. c Time evolution of the maximum power point photocurrent density (J MPP) of a SAM-modified (red) and poled, unmodified bc-PSC (black) and their power output d
Fig. 4Spatial photocurrent and photoluminescence mapping of self-assembled monolayer modified back-contact perovskite solar cells. a Spatial PC map of a SAM-modified bc-PSC at short-circuit condition. b Spatial PL map of a SAM-modified bc-PSC at short-circuit condition. c PC and PL profile obtained by averaging the PC and PL maps along the vertical direction. d Atomic-force-microscopy (AFM) topography map of a SAM-modified bc-PSC. e AFM topography map profile of a SAM-modified bc-PSC. The scanned area in all subpanels is 42 × 12 μm
Fig. 5Modelling of theoretical power conversion efficiency limit and collection efficiency. a Theoretical power conversion efficiency limit (red) as a function of barrier height Φ B, calculated for a Schottky junction MAPbI3 back-contact perovskite solar cells (bc-PSCs) under AM1.5 G irradiation, according to Pulfrey et al.[29]. The temperature of the device was assumed to be T = 300 K, the effective Richardson constant (thermionic emission) A** = 120 A cm−2 K−2. The black curve shows the maximum power conversion efficiency for the ideal situation in which the barrier height is equal to the band-gap. The black circle indicates the maximum theoretical PCE achievable for a 4-methoxythiophenol (OMeTP) and 4-chlorothiophenol (ClTP) modified “a”-MAPbI3-“b” bc-PSC. b Contour map of charge collection efficiency as a function of diffusion length L d and electrode separation distance. The dashed lines indicate the current experimental device parameters