"Perovskite / Carbon" interface has remained a key bottleneck for the hole-conductor-free perovskite solar cells based on carbon-electrode (CPSCs), due to problems like loose physics contact, defects, energy mismatch, poor chemical coupling, etc. A previous study shows that octylammonium iodide (OAI) blending in carbon paste induced a kind of "in-situ healing" effect for "perovskite / carbon" interface, and improved power conversion efficiency from ≈13% to >19%. Here the beneath mechanism is further explored by careful examination of the interaction between OAI molecule and carbon black (CB) nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF"Perovskite/carbon" interface is a bottle-neck for hole-conductor-free, carbon-electrode basing perovskite solar cells due to the energy mismatch and concentrated defects. In this article, in-situ healing strategy is proposed by doping octylammonium iodide into carbon paste that used to prepare carbon-electrode on perovskite layer. This strategy is found to strengthen interfacial contact and reduce interfacial defects on one hand, and slightly elevate the work function of the carbon-electrode on other hand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP) is doped to PbI and organic salt during two-step growth of halideperovskite. It is observed that PVP molecules can interact with both PbI and organic salt, reduce the aggregation and crystallization of the two, and then slow down the coarsening rate of perovskite. As doping concentration increases from 0 to 1 mM in organic salt, average crystallite size of perovskite decreases monotonously from 90 to 34 nm; Surface fluctuation reduces from 259.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFast reaction between organic salt and lead iodide always leads to small perovskite crystallites and concentrated defects. Here, polyacrylic acid is blended with organic salt, so as to regulate the crystallization in a two-step growth method. It is observed that addition of polyacrylic acid retards aggregation and crystallization behavior of the organic salt, and slows down the reaction rate between organic salt and PbI , by which "slow-release effect" is defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work investigates the photovoltaic properties of polymers that include different carbazole blocks as electron donors (D) but the same benzothiadiazole derivative as the electron acceptor (A). Five D-A copolymers are studied with ultrafast intramolecular exciton splitting and recombination dynamics to acquire the single-molecule structure and their photovoltaic performance relationship. The photovoltaic parameters such as energy level, optical band gap, and light-harvesting ability are highly dependent on the molecular structure of the donor monomer (including their appended flexible alkyl chain).
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