Enhanced carrier extraction and photostability in perovskite solar cells via a band-engineered Sb2Ox/TiO2 bilayer heterojunction
Abstract
Efficient electron extraction and suppression of recombination at the perovskite/electron transport layer (ETL) interface are critical for high-performance perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Heterostructured ETLs, compared to their conventional single-layer counterparts, provide enhanced charge transport through precise band edge engineering, enabling faster electron extraction and significantly reducing interfacial recombination losses. In this study, we present a bilayer heterojunction (BLH) ETL composed of antimony oxide (Sb2Ox, where x ≈ 4.44) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) designed to optimize charge dynamics in n–i–p structured PSCs. The lower conduction band edge of Sb2Ox compared to TiO2 creates a favorable cascade energy alignment that promotes efficient and unidirectional electron transport, while its deep valence band acts as an energy barrier to hole injection, effectively minimizing interfacial recombination losses. As a result, PSCs incorporating the BLH ETL achieve a champion power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 23.72%, substantially outperforming devices using TiO2 ETLs prepared under comparable conditions. Furthermore, the strong UV-absorbing capability of the underlying Sb2Ox layer shields the upper TiO2 from UV-induced photocatalytic activity, thereby preventing degradation of the adjacent perovskite layer and significantly enhancing its photostability. This strategy presents a scalable and effective interface engineering approach that greatly improves charge extraction and overall device performance.

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