| Literature DB >> 34099667 |
Hong Zhang1, Felix Thomas Eickemeyer1, Zhiwen Zhou1, Marko Mladenović2, Farzaneh Jahanbakhshi2, Lena Merten3, Alexander Hinderhofer3, Michael A Hope4, Olivier Ouellette1, Aditya Mishra4, Paramvir Ahlawat2, Dan Ren1, Tzu-Sen Su1, Anurag Krishna5, Zaiwei Wang5, Zhaowen Dong6, Jinming Guo7, Shaik M Zakeeruddin1, Frank Schreiber3, Anders Hagfeldt5,8, Lyndon Emsley4, Ursula Rothlisberger2, Jovana V Milić9,10, Michael Grätzel11.
Abstract
Formamidinium lead iodide perovskites are promising light-harvesting materials, yet stabilizing them under operating conditions without compromising optimal optoelectronic properties remains challenging. We report a multimodal host-guest complexation strategy to overcome this challenge using a crown ether, dibenzo-21-crown-7, which acts as a vehicle that assembles at the interface and delivers Cs+ ions into the interior while modulating the material. This provides a local gradient of doping at the nanoscale that assists in photoinduced charge separation while passivating surface and bulk defects, stabilizing the perovskite phase through a synergistic effect of the host, guest, and host-guest complex. The resulting solar cells show power conversion efficiencies exceeding 24% and enhanced operational stability, maintaining over 95% of their performance without encapsulation for 500 h under continuous operation. Moreover, the host contributes to binding lead ions, reducing their environmental impact. This supramolecular strategy illustrates the broad implications of host-guest chemistry in photovoltaics.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34099667 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23566-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919