Multifunctional ytterbium oxide buffer for perovskite solar cells

Nature Springer Nature 625:7995 (2024) 516-522

Authors:

Peng Chen, Yun Xiao, Juntao Hu, Shunde Li, Deying Luo, Rui Su, Pietro Caprioglio, Pascal Kaienburg, Xiaohan Jia, Nan Chen, Jingjing Wu, Yanping Sui, Pengyi Tang, Haoming Yan, Tianyu Huang, Maotao Yu, Qiuyang Li, Lichen Zhao, Cheng-Hung Hou, Yun-Wen You, Jing-Jong Shyue, Dengke Wang, Xiaojun Li, Qing Zhao, Qihuang Gong, Zheng-Hong Lu, Henry J Snaith, Rui Zhu

Abstract:

Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) comprise a solid perovskite absorber sandwiched between several layers of different charge-selective materials, ensuring unidirectional current flow and high voltage output of the devices. A ‘buffer material’ between the electron-selective layer and the metal electrode in p-type/intrinsic/n-type (p-i-n) PSCs (also known as inverted PSCs) enables electrons to flow from the electron-selective layer to the electrode. Furthermore, it acts as a barrier inhibiting the inter-diffusion of harmful species into or degradation products out of the perovskite absorber. Thus far, evaporable organic molecules and atomic-layer-deposited metal oxides have been successful, but each has specific imperfections. Here we report a chemically stable and multifunctional buffer material, ytterbium oxide (YbOx), for p-i-n PSCs by scalable thermal evaporation deposition. We used this YbOx buffer in the p-i-n PSCs with a narrow-bandgap perovskite absorber, yielding a certified power conversion efficiency of more than 25%. We also demonstrate the broad applicability of YbOx in enabling highly efficient PSCs from various types of perovskite absorber layer, delivering state-of-the-art efficiencies of 20.1% for the wide-bandgap perovskite absorber and 22.1% for the mid-bandgap perovskite absorber, respectively. Moreover, when subjected to ISOS-L-3 accelerated ageing, encapsulated devices with YbOx exhibit markedly enhanced device stability.

Direct observation of phase transitions between delta- and alpha-phase FAPbI 3 via defocused Raman spectroscopy

Journal of Materials Chemistry A Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) (2024)

Authors:

Bernd K Sturdza, Benjamin M Gallant, Philippe Holzhey, Elisabeth A Duijnstee, Marko W von der Leyen, Harry C Sansom, Henry J Snaith, Moritz K Riede, Robin J Nicholas

Abstract:

The ability to characterise perovskite phases non-destructively is key on the route to ensuring their long-term stability in operando. Raman spectroscopy holds the promise to play an important role in this task. Among all perovskites, formamidinium lead iodide (FAPbI3) has emerged as one of the most promising candidates for single-junction photovoltaic cells. However, Raman spectroscopy of FAPbI3 remains challenging as is evidenced by conflicting reports in the literature. Here, we demonstrate that due to the vulnerability of FAPbI3 to laser-induced degradation, the detected Raman spectrum depends strongly on the experimental conditions. This can lead to conflicting results and is revealed as the origin of discrepancies in the literature. We overcome this issue by deploying defocused Raman spectroscopy, preventing laser-induced damage to the sample and simultaneously improving the signal-to-noise ratio, allowing us to furthermore resolve much weaker Raman modes than was previously possible. We offer step-by-step instructions on how to apply this technique to a given spectrometer. Non-destructive characterisation of the FAPbI3 phases further enables us to quantify the phase stability of pristine FAPbI3 crystals and FAPbI3 grown with the high-performance additive methylenediammonium chloride (MDACl2). This shows that the neat crystals fully degrade within two weeks, whereas in samples grown with the additive only about 2% of the crystal bulk is in the δ-phase after 400 days. This establishes defocused Raman spectroscopy as a powerful tool for the characterisation of FAPbI3 and other perovskite materials.

From generation to collection – impact of deposition temperature on charge carrier dynamics of high-performance vacuum-processed organic solar cells

Energy & Environmental Science Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) (2024)

Authors:

Richard Adam Pacalaj, Yifan Dong, Ivan Ramirez, Roderick CI MacKenzie, Seyed Mehrdad Hosseini, Eva Bittrich, Julian Eliah Heger, Pascal Kaienburg, Subhrangsu Mukherjee, Jiaying Wu, Moritz Riede, Harald Ade, Peter Müller-Buschbaum, Martin Pfeiffer, James Robert Durrant

Abstract:

<jats:p>Substrate heating during co-evaporation of bulk heterojunction organic solar cells aids phase separation and improves performance. While recombination remains unaffected, hole transport improves due to more crystalline donor domains.</jats:p>

NEXAFS and SE data for PhD Thesis

University of Oxford (2024)

Abstract:

This dataset contains snapshots of the fitting of spectroscopic ellipsometry data using CompleteEase and NEXAFS data using QANT (Igor). This data was used in my thesis titled "An exploration of vacuum evaporable non-fullerene acceptors for use in organic solar cells and molecular orientation in evaporated thin films".

Solar Energy in Africa - An Overview, with a Focus on Egypt

Chapter in Innovations and Interdisciplinary Solutions for Underserved Areas, Springer Nature 541 (2024) 173-186

Authors:

Manar Mostafa, Fathy El-Shahat, Moritz Riede, Ghada Bassioni