| Literature DB >> 32958933 |
Shengfan Wu1, Zhen Li1, Mu-Qing Li1,2, Yingxue Diao1,3, Francis Lin1, Tiantian Liu1, Jie Zhang1, Peter Tieu4, Wenpei Gao5, Feng Qi1, Xiaoqing Pan5,6,7, Zhengtao Xu8, Zonglong Zhu9, Alex K-Y Jen10,11,12.
Abstract
Despite the notable progress in perovskite solar cells, maintaining long-term operational stability and minimizing potentially leaked lead (Pb2+) ions are two challenges that are yet to be resolved. Here we address these issues using a thiol-functionalized 2D conjugated metal-organic framework as an electron-extraction layer at the perovskite/cathode interface. The resultant devices exhibit high power conversion efficiency (22.02%) along with a substantially improved long-term operational stability. The perovskite solar cell modified with a metal-organic framework could retain more than 90% of its initial efficiency under accelerated testing conditions, that is continuous light irradiation at maximum power point tracking for 1,000 h at 85 °C. More importantly, the functionalized metal-organic framework could capture most of the Pb2+ leaked from the degraded perovskite solar cells by forming water-insoluble solids. Therefore, this method that simultaneously tackles the operational stability and lead contamination issues in perovskite solar cells could greatly improve the feasibility of large-scale deployment of perovskite photovoltaic technology.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32958933 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-020-0765-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213