Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells

Titanium dioxide (TiO2) electron transport layers (ETLs) are still widely used in perovskite solar cells (PSCs) due to their compatibility with existing printing technologies and favorable energy level alignment for efficient electron extraction. However, TiO2 ETLs suffer from surface defects, e.g....

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Main Authors: Bening Tirta Muhammad, Salim, Teddy, Bruno, Annalisa, Grimsdale, Andrew C., Leong, Wei Lin
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156862
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1568622022-05-07T20:11:14Z Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells Bening Tirta Muhammad Salim, Teddy Bruno, Annalisa Grimsdale, Andrew C. Leong, Wei Lin School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Interdisciplinary Graduate School (IGS) School of Materials Science and Engineering Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N) Engineering::Materials::Energy materials Perovskite Solar Cell Stability Titanium dioxide (TiO2) electron transport layers (ETLs) are still widely used in perovskite solar cells (PSCs) due to their compatibility with existing printing technologies and favorable energy level alignment for efficient electron extraction. However, TiO2 ETLs suffer from surface defects, e.g. oxygen vacancies, that are detrimental to the perovskite/ETL interface stability, especially under operational conditions. Furthermore, hydroxyl groups present on the TiO2 surface also contribute to deprotonation of acidic organic cations in PSCs. We thus hypothesize that the metal oxide surface turns chemically reactive under 1-sun illumination whereby devices are highly populated with charge carriers and experience elevated temperatures (ca. 60 °C). Here, we introduced facile incorporation of sulfate species on the metal oxide surface to minimize chemical degradation at the perovskite/ETL interface. The sulfate treatment was found to minimally influence the perovskite film morphology grown on top of the ETLs, so ruling out morphological effects and allowing us to study the perovskite/ETL interface stability. We found that the sulfate treated devices exhibited enhanced operational stability under the initial maximum power point voltage (VMPP) over 1800 s of measurement. The sulfate treated devices retained 95% of their initial efficiency while the pristine devices already lost more than 40% of their initial efficiency. We also thermally aged encapsulated perovskite films coated on top of pristine and treated ETLs. We found that the thermally aged perovskite films coated on the pristine ETL contained perovskite hydrate species while the treated samples did not. We thus postulate that the water molecules contributing to hydrate formation were generated solely from the ETL/perovskite interface. Lastly, better energy alignment was also found between the perovskite and sulfate-treated ETL, which also contributes to the improved operational and thermal stability. Ministry of Education (MOE) Submitted/Accepted version This work is supported by Ministry of Education (MOE) under AcRF Tier 2 grant (2019-T2-2-106) and National Robotics Programme (W1925d0106). 2022-05-04T03:00:20Z 2022-05-04T03:00:20Z 2021 Journal Article Bening Tirta Muhammad, Salim, T., Bruno, A., Grimsdale, A. C. & Leong, W. L. (2021). Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells. Journal of Materials Chemistry C, 9(40), 14334-14341. https://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D1TC02657G 2050-7526 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156862 10.1039/D1TC02657G 40 9 14334 14341 en 2019-T2-2-106 W1925d0106 Journal of Materials Chemistry C 10.21979/N9/2CWHXO © 2021 The Royal Society of Chemistry. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Journal of Materials Chemistry C and is made available with permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
Perovskite Solar Cell
Stability
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials::Energy materials
Perovskite Solar Cell
Stability
Bening Tirta Muhammad
Salim, Teddy
Bruno, Annalisa
Grimsdale, Andrew C.
Leong, Wei Lin
Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
description Titanium dioxide (TiO2) electron transport layers (ETLs) are still widely used in perovskite solar cells (PSCs) due to their compatibility with existing printing technologies and favorable energy level alignment for efficient electron extraction. However, TiO2 ETLs suffer from surface defects, e.g. oxygen vacancies, that are detrimental to the perovskite/ETL interface stability, especially under operational conditions. Furthermore, hydroxyl groups present on the TiO2 surface also contribute to deprotonation of acidic organic cations in PSCs. We thus hypothesize that the metal oxide surface turns chemically reactive under 1-sun illumination whereby devices are highly populated with charge carriers and experience elevated temperatures (ca. 60 °C). Here, we introduced facile incorporation of sulfate species on the metal oxide surface to minimize chemical degradation at the perovskite/ETL interface. The sulfate treatment was found to minimally influence the perovskite film morphology grown on top of the ETLs, so ruling out morphological effects and allowing us to study the perovskite/ETL interface stability. We found that the sulfate treated devices exhibited enhanced operational stability under the initial maximum power point voltage (VMPP) over 1800 s of measurement. The sulfate treated devices retained 95% of their initial efficiency while the pristine devices already lost more than 40% of their initial efficiency. We also thermally aged encapsulated perovskite films coated on top of pristine and treated ETLs. We found that the thermally aged perovskite films coated on the pristine ETL contained perovskite hydrate species while the treated samples did not. We thus postulate that the water molecules contributing to hydrate formation were generated solely from the ETL/perovskite interface. Lastly, better energy alignment was also found between the perovskite and sulfate-treated ETL, which also contributes to the improved operational and thermal stability.
author2 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
author_facet School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Bening Tirta Muhammad
Salim, Teddy
Bruno, Annalisa
Grimsdale, Andrew C.
Leong, Wei Lin
format Article
author Bening Tirta Muhammad
Salim, Teddy
Bruno, Annalisa
Grimsdale, Andrew C.
Leong, Wei Lin
author_sort Bening Tirta Muhammad
title Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
title_short Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
title_full Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
title_fullStr Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
title_full_unstemmed Ammonium sulfate treatment at the TiO₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
title_sort ammonium sulfate treatment at the tio₂/perovskite interface boosts operational stability of perovskite solar cells
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156862
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