Deterministic fabrication of 3D/2D perovskite bilayer stacks for durable and efficient solar cells

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Abstract

Realizing solution-processed heterostructures is a long-enduring challenge in halide perovskites because of solvent incompatibilities that disrupt the underlying layer. By leveraging the solvent dielectric constant and Gutmann donor number, we could grow phase-pure two-dimensional (2D) halide perovskite stacks of the desired composition, thickness, and bandgap onto 3D perovskites without dissolving the underlying substrate. Characterization reveals a 3D–2D transition region of 20 nanometers mainly determined by the roughness of the bottom 3D layer. Thickness dependence of the 2D perovskite layer reveals the anticipated trends for n-i-p and p-i-n architectures, which is consistent with band alignment and carrier transport limits for 2D perovskites. We measured a photovoltaic efficiency of 24.5%, with exceptional stability of T99 (time required to preserve 99% of initial photovoltaic efficiency) of >2000 hours, implying that the 3D/2D bilayer inherits the intrinsic durability of 2D perovskite without compromising efficiency.

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Sidhik, S., Wang, Y., De Siena, M., Asadpour, R., Torma, A. J., Terlier, T., … Mohite, A. D. (2022). Deterministic fabrication of 3D/2D perovskite bilayer stacks for durable and efficient solar cells. Science, 377(6613), 1425–1430. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abq7652

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