Interfacial modification using ultrasonic atomized graphene quantum dots for efficient perovskite solar cells

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Abstract

Tin dioxide (SnO2) is a promising electron transport material to replace traditional titanium dioxide (TiO2) for fabricating efficient planar perovskite solar cells (PSCs). However, in order to realize process compatibility and larger scale device, low temperature solution processed SnO2 is normally used, which generates numerous trap states in ETL layer and directly affects the device performance. Here, an interfacial modification strategy proposed, depositing an ultrasonic atomized ultrathin graphene quantum dots (GQDs) layer between tin dioxide (SnO2) and perovskite layer. Ultrasonic atomized deposition can effectively prevent the damage of the surface chemical properties of SnO2 by aqueous solution. Additionally, we demonstrate that the GQDs change the surface property of SnO2 film, and optimized the charge transport capability in SnO2 and perovskite interface. Correspondingly, we obtained a significant power conversion efficiency (PCE) improvement for CH3NH3PbI3-based PSCs from 13.61% to 16.54% and reached a highest steady-state PCE over 16%. We believe that the interfacial modification engineering by means of ultrasonic atomizing process is a promising tactic to obtain efficient perovskite solar cells.

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Xia, H., Ma, Z., Xiao, Z., Zhou, W., Zhang, H., Du, C., … Huang, Y. (2019). Interfacial modification using ultrasonic atomized graphene quantum dots for efficient perovskite solar cells. Organic Electronics, 75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orgel.2019.105415

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