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  4. A newly developed lithium cobalt oxide super hydrophilic film for large area, thermally stable and highly efficient inverted perovskite solar cells
 
research article

A newly developed lithium cobalt oxide super hydrophilic film for large area, thermally stable and highly efficient inverted perovskite solar cells

Chiang, Chien-Hung
•
Chen, Cheng-Chiang
•
Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja  
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August 3, 2018
Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability

A new inorganic hole transporting layer, a sputtering made LiCoO2 film, was developed and used in an inverted perovskite solar cell (PSC) and sub-module (PSM). The LiCoO2 film prepared by RF magnetron sputtering is composed of nano-sized particles and a superhydrophilic surface after treating it with UV-ozone, and therefore can be wetted evenly with a (MAI + PbI2)/(DMF + DMSO) precursor solution. By applying chlorobenzene as an anti-solvent, a very dense film with big perovskite grains was formed. After depositing the C-60 electron transporting layer, BCP hole blocking layer and Ag electrode, the best perovskite solar cell achieves a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 19% with negligible current hysteresis. The high-efficiency cell is stable up to 90 degrees C in the inert atmosphere without encapsulation, and the PCE only decreases by 2% when the cell was heated at 100 degrees C for 30 minutes. When the cell was heated at 100 degrees C for 5 days, the PCE decreases by only 40%; nevertheless, under the same heating conditions, the efficiency of the PSC based on the PEDOT:PSS HTL is lost totally. The superhydrophilic surface of LiCoO2 made the even wetting of the large surface area with the perovskite precursor solution possible. Therefore the perovskite solar sub-module with an active area of 25.2 cm(2) (on a 10 cm x 10 cm substrate) can be fabricated to achieve a power conversion efficiency of 16% which was further verified to be 15%. The high-efficiency sub-module based on the LiCoO2 HTL also shows good thermal stability, and ca. 10% of the efficiency was lost by heating at 100 degrees C for 30 minutes. The development of new inorganic hole transporting layers for large area, thermally stable and highly efficient perovskite solar sub-modules closes the gap for their near-future market exploitation.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1039/c8ta05264f
Author(s)
Chiang, Chien-Hung
Chen, Cheng-Chiang
Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja  
Wu, Chun-Guey
Date Issued

2018-08-03

Published in
Journal of Materials Chemistry A: Materials for Energy and Sustainability
Volume

6

Issue

28

Start page

13751

End page

13760

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GMF  
Available on Infoscience
October 31, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/149593
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