Passivation engineering has been identified as an effective strategy to eliminate the targeted interfacial defects for improving the efficiency and stability of perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Herein, 4-trifluorophenylammonium iodide (CFPhAI) is presented as a multifunctional passivation agent to modify buried SnO/perovskite and perovskite/hole transport layer (HTL) interfaces. Upon incorporation of CFPhAI between SnO and perovskite, CFPhAI can chemically link to SnO via Lewis coordination and electrostatic coupling, thereby effectively passivating under-coordinated Sn and filling the oxygen vacancy. Meanwhile, CFPhAI helps anchor PbI and organic cations (MA/FA) to control the crystallization of the perovskite. Consequently, reduced interfacial defects, homogeneous perovskite crystallites, and better energetic alignment can be simultaneously achieved. When CFPhAI was further used to modify the perovskite/HTL interface, the fabricated PSCs yielded an impressive power conversion efficiency of 23.06% together with negligible - hysteresis. The unencapsulated devices exhibited long-term stability in wet conditions (91.8% efficiency retention after 1000 h) due to the water-resistant CFPhAI. We also achieved good light soaking stability, maintaining 86.1% of its initial efficiency after aging for 720 h. Overall, our finding provides a promising strategy for modifying the dual contact interfaces of PSCs toward improved efficiency and stability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c19549 | DOI Listing |
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