A customized fullerene based metal oxide electron transport layer surface activity inhibitor to enhance the operational stability of perovskite solar cells
Abstract
One of the most notorious problems with classic perovskite (MAPbI3) is the rapid degradation induced by superoxide radicals (O2˙−) generated on the surface under light and O2 conditions (light/O2). This work found that SnO2 and TiO2 surfaces can generate O2˙−, inducing hidden degradation at the bottom of MAPbI3 thin films, leading to a rapid decline in the performance of packaged devices. Using TiO2 and SnO2 as electron transport layers, we investigate the relationship between the number of O2˙− generated on their surfaces and the degradation rate of MAPbI3 films. A fullerene idebenone derivative (C60IDB) was introduced as a buffer layer between SnO2 and MAPbI3 to clear O2˙− and eliminate degradation, decrease the density of interface defect states, and accelerate the transmission of photogenerated electrons. Consequently, the C60IDB-modified device had a maximum efficiency of 22.17%, among the most significant recorded efficiencies for MAPbI3-based perovskite solar cells (PSCs). C60IDB eliminates degradation at the MAPbI3 films' buried interface, and following 528 hours of UV irradiation in ambient air, the target device maintained 93% of the original power conversion efficiency (PCE). This work reveals the veiled degradation at the buried interface of MAPbI3 induced by O2˙− and provides reliable solutions.