Monolithically-grained perovskite solar cell with Mortise-Tenon structure for charge extraction balance

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Abstract

Although the power conversion efficiency values of perovskite solar cells continue to be refreshed, it is still far from the theoretical Shockley-Queisser limit. Two major issues need to be addressed, including disorder crystallization of perovskite and unbalanced interface charge extraction, which limit further improvements in device efficiency. Herein, we develop a thermally polymerized additive as the polymer template in the perovskite film, which can form monolithic perovskite grain and a unique “Mortise-Tenon” structure after spin-coating hole-transport layer. Importantly, the suppressed non-radiative recombination and balanced interface charge extraction benefit from high-quality perovskite crystals and Mortise-Tenon structure, resulting in enhanced open-circuit voltage and fill-factor of the device. The PSCs achieve certified efficiency of 24.55% and maintain >95% initial efficiency over 1100 h in accordance with the ISOS-L-2 protocol, as well as excellent endurance according to the ISOS-D-3 accelerated aging test.

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Wang, F., Li, M., Tian, Q., Sun, R., Ma, H., Wang, H., … Qin, T. (2023). Monolithically-grained perovskite solar cell with Mortise-Tenon structure for charge extraction balance. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38926-3

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