Abstract
The recent evolution of solution-processed hybrid organic-inorganic perovskite-based photovoltaic devices opens up the commercial avenue for high-throughput roll-to-roll manufacturing technology. To circumvent the thermal limitations that hinder the use of metal oxide charge transport layers on plastic flexible substrates in such technologies, we employed a relatively low-power nitrogen plasma treatment to achieve compact SnO2 thin-film electrodes at near room temperature. The perovskite photovoltaic devices thus fabricated using N2 plasma-treated SnO2 performed on par with thermally annealed SnO2 electrodes and resulted in a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of ca. 20.3% with stabilized power output (SPO) of ca. 19.1% on rigid substrates. Furthermore, the process is extended to realize flexible perovskite solar cells on indium tin oxide (ITO)-coated polyethylene terephthalate (PET) substrates with champion PCE of 18.1% (SPO ca. 17.1%), which retained ca. 90% of its initial performance after 1000 bending cycles. Our investigations reveal that deep ultraviolet irradiation associated with N2 and N2O plasma emission plays a major role in obtaining good quality metal oxide thin films at lower temperatures and offers promise toward facile integration of a wide variety of metal oxides on flexible substrates.
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CITATION STYLE
Subbiah, A. S., Mathews, N., Mhaisalkar, S., & Sarkar, S. K. (2018). Novel Plasma-Assisted Low-Temperature-Processed SnO2 Thin Films for Efficient Flexible Perovskite Photovoltaics. ACS Energy Letters, 3(7), 1482–1491. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsenergylett.8b00692
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