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Outstanding Performance of Hole‐Blocking Layer‐Free Perovskite Solar Cell Using Hierarchically Porous Fluorine‐Doped Tin Oxide Substrate
Author(s) -
Yu Haejun,
Lee Jong Woo,
Yun Juyoung,
Lee Kisu,
Ryu Jaehoon,
Lee Jungsup,
Hwang Doyk,
Kim Seong Keun,
Jang Jyongsik
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced energy materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.08
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1614-6840
pISSN - 1614-6832
DOI - 10.1002/aenm.201700749
Subject(s) - materials science , tin oxide , perovskite (structure) , energy conversion efficiency , photocurrent , mesoporous material , doping , perovskite solar cell , substrate (aquarium) , nanotechnology , indium tin oxide , layer (electronics) , chemical engineering , oxide , optoelectronics , catalysis , biochemistry , chemistry , oceanography , engineering , metallurgy , geology
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are of great interest in current photovoltaic research due to their extraordinary power conversion efficiency of ≈20% and boundless potentialities. The high efficiency has been mostly obtained from TiO 2 ‐based PSCs, where TiO 2 is utilized as a hole‐blocking, mesoporous layer. However, trapped charges and the light‐induced photocatalytic effect of TiO 2 seriously degrade the perovskite and preclude PSCs from being immediately commercialized. Herein, a simplified PSC is successfully fabricated by eliminating the problematic TiO 2 layers, using instead a fluorine‐doped tin oxide (FTO)/perovskite/hole–conductor/Au design. Simultaneously, the sluggish charge extraction at the FTO/perovskite interface is overcome by modifying the surface of the FTO to a porous structure using electrochemical etching. This surface engineering enables a substantial increase in the photocurrent density and mitigation of the hysteretic behavior of the pristine FTO‐based PSC; a remarkable 19.22% efficiency with a low level of hysteresis is obtained. This performance is closely approaching that of conventional PSCs and may facilitate their commercialization due to improved convenience, lower cost, greater stability, and potentially more efficient mass production.