Carrier separation and transport in perovskite solar cells studied by nanometre-scale profiling of electrical potential

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Abstract

Organometal-halide perovskite solar cells have greatly improved in just a few years to a power conversion efficiency exceeding 20%. This technology shows unprecedented promise for terawatt-scale deployment of solar energy because of its low-cost, solution-based processing and earth-abundant materials. We have studied charge separation and transport in perovskite solar cells - which are the fundamental mechanisms of device operation and critical factors for power output - by determining the junction structure across the device using the nanoelectrical characterization technique of Kelvin probe force microscopy. The distribution of electrical potential across both planar and porous devices demonstrates p-n junction structure at the TiO 2 /perovskite interfaces and minority-carrier diffusion/drift operation of the devices, rather than the operation mechanism of either an excitonic cell or a p-i-n structure. Combining the potential profiling results with solar cell performance parameters measured on optimized and thickened devices, we find that carrier mobility is a main factor that needs to be improved for further gains in efficiency of the perovskite solar cells.

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Jiang, C. S., Yang, M., Zhou, Y., To, B., Nanayakkara, S. U., Luther, J. M., … Al-Jassim, M. M. (2015). Carrier separation and transport in perovskite solar cells studied by nanometre-scale profiling of electrical potential. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9397

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