The inherent instability of UV-induced degradation in TiO-based perovskite solar cells was largely improved by replacing the anatase-phase compact TiO layer with an atomic sheet transport layer (ASTL) of two-dimensional (2D) TiO. The vital role of microscopic carrier dynamics that govern the UV stability of perovskite solar cells was comprehensively examined in this work by performing time-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy. In conventional perovskite solar cells, the presence of a UV-active oxygen vacancy in compact TiO prohibits current generation by heavily trapping electrons after UV degradation. Conversely, the dominant vacancy type in the 2D TiO ASTL is a titanium vacancy, which is a shallow acceptor and is not UV-sensitive. Therefore, it significantly suppresses carrier recombination and extends UV stability in perovskite solar cells with a 2D TiO ASTL. Other carrier dynamics, such as electron diffusion, electron injection, and hot hole transfer processes, were found to be less affected by UV irradiation. Quantitative pump-probe data clearly show a correlation between the carrier dynamics and UV aging of perovskite solar cells, thus providing a profound insight into the factors driving UV-induced degradation in perovskite solar cells and the origin of its performance.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.9b02434 | DOI Listing |
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