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1.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 33, 2021 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33420108

ABSTRACT

Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) expressed great potentials for offering a feasible alternative to conventional photovoltaic technologies. 2D/3D hybrid PSCs, where a 2D capping layer is used over the 3D film to avoid the instability issues associated with perovskite film, have been reported with improved stabilities and high power conversion efficiencies (PCE). However, the profound analysis of the PSCs with prolonged operational lifetime still needs to be described further. Heading towards efficient and long-life PSCs, in-depth insight into the complicated degradation processes and charge dynamics occurring at PSCs' interfaces is vital. In particular, the Au/HTM/perovskite interface got a substantial consideration due to the quest for better charge transfer; and this interface is debatably the trickiest to explain and analyze. In this study, multiple characterization techniques were put together to understand thoroughly the processes that occur at the Au/HTM/perovskite interface. Inquest analysis using current-voltage (I-V), electric field induced second harmonic generation (EFISHG), and impedance spectroscopy (IS) was performed. These techniques showed that the degradation at the Au/HTM/perovskite interface significantly contribute to the increase of charge accumulation and change in impedance value of the PSCs, hence resulting in efficiency fading. The 3D and 2D/3D hybrid cells, with PCEs of 18.87% and 20.21%, respectively, were used in this study, and the analysis was performed over the aging time of 5000 h. Our findings propose that the Au/HTM/perovskite interface engineering is exclusively essential for attaining a reliable performance of the PSCs and provides a new perspective towards the stability enhancement for the perovskite-based future emerging photovoltaic technology.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 18(17): 2381-2389, 2017 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28627744

ABSTRACT

With a power conversion efficiency (PCE) exceeding 22 %, perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have thrilled photovoltaic research. However, the interface behavior is still not understood and is a hot topic of research: different processes occur over a hierarchy of timescales, from femtoseconds to seconds, which makes perovskite interface physics intriguing. Herein, through femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy with spectral coverage extending into the crucial IR region, the ultrafast interface-specific processes at standard and newly molecularly engineered perovskite interfaces in state-of-the-art PSCs are interrogated. Ultrafast interfacial charge injection occurs with a time constant of 100 fs, resulting in hot transfer from energetic charges and setting the timescale for the first step involved in the complex charge-transfer process. This is also true for 20 % efficient devices measured under real operation, for which the femtosecond injection is followed by a slower picosecond component. These findings provide compelling evidence for the femtosecond interfacial charge-injection step and demonstrate a robust method for the straightforward identification of interfacial non-equilibrium processes on the ultrafast timescale.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(17): 5981-3, 2010 May 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20384327

ABSTRACT

Charge separation and diffusion in type II multilayered structures of CdTe and CdSe nanocrystals with a polymer spacer are unambiguously proven by surface photovoltage spectroscopy. Holes accumulate in CdTe nanocrystal layers, and the electrons in CdSe nanocrystal layers. An increase of thickness of the polymer spacer strongly decreases the charge separation efficiency. Surface photovoltage transients demonstrate diffusion of the separated charges over several layers of the same kind of nanocrystals.

5.
Nano Lett ; 6(4): 640-50, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16608258

ABSTRACT

Four different types of solar cells prepared in different laboratories have been characterized by impedance spectroscopy (IS): thin-film CdS/CdTe devices, an extremely thin absorber (eta) solar cell made with microporous TiO2/In(OH)xSy/PbS/PEDOT, an eta-solar cell of nanowire ZnO/CdSe/CuSCN, and a solid-state dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) with Spiro-OMeTAD as the transparent hole conductor. A negative capacitance behavior has been observed in all of them at high forward bias, independent of material type (organic and inorganic), configuration, and geometry of the cells studied. The experiments suggest a universality of the underlying phenomenon giving rise to this effect in a broad range of solar cell devices. An equivalent circuit model is suggested to explain the impedance and capacitance spectra, with an inductive recombination pathway that is activated at forward bias. The deleterious effect of negative capacitance on the device performance is discussed, by comparison of the results obtained for a conventional monocrystalline Si solar cell showing the positive chemical capacitance expected in the ideal IS model of a solar cell.


Subject(s)
Cadmium Compounds/chemistry , Electric Power Supplies , Electrochemistry/instrumentation , Models, Chemical , Nanostructures/chemistry , Sulfides/chemistry , Tellurium/chemistry , Cadmium Compounds/radiation effects , Computer Simulation , Crystallization/methods , Electric Capacitance , Electrochemistry/methods , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Light , Materials Testing , Nanostructures/analysis , Nanostructures/radiation effects , Solar Energy , Sulfides/radiation effects , Tellurium/radiation effects
6.
J Phys Chem B ; 109(31): 14932-8, 2005 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16852891

ABSTRACT

Surface photovoltage transients were used to monitor both the short time dynamics (>10 ns) and the spatial distribution of electrons photoinjected in thin (2-20 nm) TiO2 layers from dye molecules adsorbed at the surface. At low temperatures (100-250 K), the dynamics are governed exclusively by spatially dependent tunneling recombination, with a rate that varies with the distance from the surface x as exp(-2x/a), and an initial exponential distribution of photoinjected electrons, n0 exp(-x/b). This model is confirmed by the observation of power law decay in time t(-a/2b) with a ratio a/b = 0.28 +/- 0.04. The stability of cis-di(isothiocyanato)-N-bis(2,2'-bipyridine-4,4'-dicarboxy) ruthenium(II) (N3) dye molecules on TiO2 during treatment in a vacuum at high temperatures was proven. For high temperatures (250-540 K), the thickness dependence of the decays indicates that the dynamics of surface recombination are retarded by the diffusion of electrons toward the interior of the film. The implications for thin layer coating in dye-sensitized solar cells are discussed.

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