Overcoming ultraviolet light instability of sensitized TiO2 with meso-superstructured organometal tri-halide perovskite solar cells

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Abstract

The power conversion efficiency of hybrid solid-state solar cells has more than doubled from 7 to 15% over the past year. This is largely as a result of the incorporation of organometallic trihalide perovskite absorbers into these devices. But, as promising as this development is, long-term operational stability is just as important as initial conversion efficiency when it comes to the development of practical solid-state solar cells. Here we identify a critical instability in mesoporous TiO2 -sensitized solar cells arising from light-induced desorption of surface-adsorbed oxygen. We show that this instability does not arise in mesoporous TiO2 -free mesosuperstructured solar cells. Moreover, our TiO2 -free cells deliver stable photocurrent for over 1,000 h continuous exposure and operation under full spectrum simulated sunlight. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

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Leijtens, T., Eperon, G. E., Pathak, S., Abate, A., Lee, M. M., & Snaith, H. J. (2013). Overcoming ultraviolet light instability of sensitized TiO2 with meso-superstructured organometal tri-halide perovskite solar cells. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3885

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