Conformal quantum dot-SnO2 layers as electron transporters for efficient perovskite solar cells

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Abstract

Improvements to perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have focused on increasing their power conversion efficiency (PCE) and operational stability and maintaining high performance upon scale-up to module sizes. We report that replacing the commonly used mesoporous-titanium dioxide electron transport layer (ETL) with a thin layer of polyacrylic acid-stabilized tin(IV) oxide quantum dots (paa-QD-SnO2) on the compact-titanium dioxide enhanced light capture and largely suppressed nonradiative recombination at the ETL-perovskite interface. The use of paa-QD-SnO2 as electron-selective contact enabled PSCs (0.08 square centimeters) with a PCE of 25.7% (certified 25.4%) and high operational stability and facilitated the scale-up of the PSCs to larger areas. PCEs of 23.3, 21.7, and 20.6% were achieved for PSCs with active areas of 1, 20, and 64 square centimeters, respectively.

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Kim, M., Jeong, J., Lu, H., Lee, T. K., Eickemeyer, F. T., Liu, Y., … Kim, D. S. (2022). Conformal quantum dot-SnO2 layers as electron transporters for efficient perovskite solar cells. Science, 375(6578), 302–306. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abh1885

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