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Journal articles

October 2023

Rational Design of a Chemical Bath Deposition Based Tin Oxide Electron‐Transport Layer for Perovskite Photovoltaics

Yongli Lu, Meng‐Chen Shih, Shaun Tan, Matthias J. Grotevent, Lili Wang, Hua Zhu, Ruiqi Zhang, Joo‐Hong Lee, Jin‐Wook Lee, Vladimir Bulović, Moungi. G. Bawendi

Abstract

Chemical bath deposition (CBD) is widely used to deposit tin oxide (SnOx ) as an electron-transport layer in perovskite solar cells (PSCs). The conventional recipe uses thioglycolic acid (TGA) to facilitate attachments of SnOx particles onto the substrate. However, nonvolatile TGA is reported to harm the operational stability of PSCs. In this work, a volatile oxalic acid (OA) is introduced as an alternative to TGA. OA, a dicarboxylic acid, functions as a chemical linker for the nucleation and attachment of particles to the substrate in the chemical bath. Moreover, OA can be readily removed through thermal annealing followed by a mild H2 O2 treatment, as shown by FTIR measurements. Synergistically, the mild H2 O2 treatment selectively oxidizes the surface of the SnOx layer, minimizing nonradiative interface carrier recombination. EELS (electron-energy-loss spectroscopy) confirms that the SnOx surface is dominated by Sn4+ , while the bulk is a mixture of Sn2+ and Sn4+ . This rational design of a CBD SnOx layer leads to devices with T85 ≈1500 h, a significant improvement over the TGA-based device with T80 ≈250 h. The champion device reached a power conversion efficiency of 24.6%. This work offers a rationale for optimizing the complex parameter space of CBD SnOx to achieve efficient and stable PSCs.

Acknowledgements

At the inception of this work, Y.L. was initially funded by Eni S.p.A. through the MIT Energy Initiative. Y.L. was then funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Solar Energy Technologies Office, under award no. DE‐EE0009512. L.W. was funded by Eni S.p.A. through the MIT Energy Initiative during the inception of this work. M.S., S.T., and R.Z. were funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Solar Energy Technologies Office, under award no. DE‐EE0009512. M.J.G.was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation through the Early Postdoctoral Mobility Fellowship grant no. P2EZP2_199844. H.Z. was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Material Sciences and Engineering (award no. DE‐SC00211650). J.‐W.L. acknowledges financial support by the Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) and the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MOTIE) of the Republic of Korea (no. 20224000000360). This work was carried out, in part, through the use of facilities at MIT.nano. The authors thank Dr. Aubrey Penn and Dr. Yang Yu for assistance.

Research Areas
MITEI Authors
Director, MIT.nano and Professor
Office of the Vice President for Research
Professor
Department of Chemistry

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