5 years ago

Perovskite solar cells with CuSCN hole extraction layers yield stabilized efficiencies greater than 20%

Michael Grätzel, Norman Pellet, M. Ibrahim Dar, Neha Arora, Alexander Hinderhofer, Shaik Mohammed Zakeeruddin, Frank Schreiber

Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with efficiencies greater than 20% have been realized only with expensive organic hole-transporting materials. We demonstrate PSCs that achieve stabilized efficiencies exceeding 20% with copper(I) thiocyanate (CuSCN) as the hole extraction layer. A fast solvent removal method enabled the creation of compact, highly conformal CuSCN layers that facilitate rapid carrier extraction and collection. The PSCs showed high thermal stability under long-term heating, although their operational stability was poor. This instability originated from potential-induced degradation of the CuSCN/Au contact. The addition of a conductive reduced graphene oxide spacer layer between CuSCN and gold allowed PSCs to retain >95% of their initial efficiency after aging at a maximum power point for 1000 hours under full solar intensity at 60°C. Under both continuous full-sun illumination and thermal stress, CuSCN-based devices surpassed the stability of spiro-OMeTAD–based PSCs.

Publisher URL: http://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/358/6364/768

DOI: 10.1126/science.aam5655

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