Efficient and Stable Perovskite Solar Cells Using Low‐Cost Aniline‐Based Enamine Hole‐Transporting Materials

Abstract

Metal‐halide perovskites offer great potential to realize low‐cost and flexible next‐generation solar cells. Low‐temperature‐processed organic hole‐transporting layers play an important role in advancing device efficiencies and stabilities. Inexpensive and stable hole‐transporting materials (HTMs) are highly desirable toward the scaling up of perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Here, a new group of aniline‐based enamine HTMs obtained via a one‐step synthesis procedure is reported, without using a transition metal catalyst, from very common and inexpensive aniline precursors. This results in a material cost reduction to less than 1/5 of that for the archetypal spiro‐OMeTAD. PSCs using an enamine V1091 HTM exhibit a champion power conversion efficiency of over 20%. Importantly, the unsealed devices with V1091 retain 96% of their original efficiency after storage in ambient air, with a relative humidity of 45% for over 800 h, while the devices fabricated using spiro‐OMeTAD dropped down to 42% of their original efficiency after aging. Additionally, these materials can be processed via both solution and vacuum processes, which is believed to open up new possibilities for interlayers used in large‐area all perovskite tandem cells, as well as many other optoelectronic device applications.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 24, 2018
Source ID
10.1002/adma.201803735

Entities

People

  • Artiom Magomedov
  • Deimante Vaitukaityte
  • Giedre Bubniene
  • Henry Snaith
  • Tadas Malinauskas
  • Vygintas Jankauskas
  • Vytautas Getautis
  • Zhiping Wang

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • European Social Fund Plus
  • Kaunas University of Technology
  • Research Council of Lithuania
  • University of Oxford
  • Vilnius University

Tags

Readers

  • Forest Ecology
  • Materials Science and Engineering.
  • Semiconductor Device Technology

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics