| Literature DB >> 29123021 |
Yi Hou1,2, Xiaoyan Du3, Simon Scheiner4, David P McMeekin5, Zhiping Wang5, Ning Li6, Manuela S Killian7, Haiwei Chen6, Moses Richter6, Ievgen Levchuk6, Nadine Schrenker8, Erdmann Spiecker8, Tobias Stubhan6, Norman A Luechinger9, Andreas Hirsch10, Patrik Schmuki7, Hans-Peter Steinrück3, Rainer H Fink3, Marcus Halik4, Henry J Snaith5, Christoph J Brabec1,11.
Abstract
A major bottleneck delaying the further commercialization of thin-film solar cells based on hybrid organohalide lead perovskites is interface loss in state-of-the-art devices. We present a generic interface architecture that combines solution-processed, reliable, and cost-efficient hole-transporting materials without compromising efficiency, stability, or scalability of perovskite solar cells. Tantalum-doped tungsten oxide (Ta-WO x )/conjugated polymer multilayers offer a surprisingly small interface barrier and form quasi-ohmic contacts universally with various scalable conjugated polymers. In a simple device with regular planar architecture and a self-assembled monolayer, Ta-WO x -doped interface-based perovskite solar cells achieve maximum efficiencies of 21.2% and offer more than 1000 hours of light stability. By eliminating additional ionic dopants, these findings open up the entire class of organics as scalable hole-transporting materials for perovskite solar cells.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29123021 DOI: 10.1126/science.aao5561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728