| Literature DB >> 35292753 |
Shaun Tan1, Tianyi Huang1, Ilhan Yavuz2, Rui Wang3,4, Tae Woong Yoon5, Mingjie Xu6, Qiyu Xing1, Keonwoo Park5, Do-Kyoung Lee7, Chung-Hao Chen1,8, Ran Zheng1, Taegeun Yoon5, Yepin Zhao1, Hao-Cheng Wang1,8, Dong Meng1, Jingjing Xue1, Young Jae Song5,9, Xiaoqing Pan6,10, Nam-Gyu Park7,11, Jin-Wook Lee12,13, Yang Yang14.
Abstract
Optoelectronic devices consist of heterointerfaces formed between dissimilar semiconducting materials. The relative energy-level alignment between contacting semiconductors determinately affects the heterointerface charge injection and extraction dynamics. For perovskite solar cells (PSCs), the heterointerface between the top perovskite surface and a charge-transporting material is often treated for defect passivation1-4 to improve the PSC stability and performance. However, such surface treatments can also affect the heterointerface energetics1. Here we show that surface treatments may induce a negative work function shift (that is, more n-type), which activates halide migration to aggravate PSC instability. Therefore, despite the beneficial effects of surface passivation, this detrimental side effect limits the maximum stability improvement attainable for PSCs treated in this way. This trade-off between the beneficial and detrimental effects should guide further work on improving PSC stability via surface treatments.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35292753 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04604-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962