Dipolar Hole-Blocking Layers for Inverted Perovskite Solar Cells: Effects of Aggregation and Electron Transport Levels
Julian F. Butscher, Qing Sun, Yufeng Wu, Fabian Stuck, Marvin, Hoffmann, Andreas Dreuw, Fabian Paulus, A. Stephen K. Hashmi, Nir Tessler and, Yana Vaynzof

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that dipolar hole-blocking layers in inverted perovskite solar cells can significantly enhance open-circuit voltage by increasing built-in potential through molecular aggregation and dipole effects, regardless of electron transport level alignment.
Contribution
It introduces new dipolar electrolytes as hole-blocking layers and shows their aggregation enhances dipole moments, improving device voltage without relying on electron transport level alignment.
Findings
Layer thickness increases open-circuit voltage.
Molecular aggregation enhances dipole moments.
High ionisation potential confirms hole-blocking effectiveness.
Abstract
Herein, we report on the synthesis and investigation of two triazino-isoquinoline tetrafluoroborate electrolytes as hole-blocking layers in methylammonium triiodide perovskite photovoltaic devices with fullerene electron extraction layer. We find that increasing the thickness of the dipolar hole-blocking layer results in a gradual increase in the open-circuit voltage suggesting that aggregation of the molecules can enhance the dipole induced by the layer. This finding is confirmed by theoretical calculations demonstrating that while both molecules exhibit a similar dipole moment in their isolated state, this dipole is significantly enhanced when they aggregate. Ultra-violet photoemission spectroscopy measurements show that both derivatives exhibit a high ionisation potential of 7 eV, in agreement with their effective hole-blocking nature demonstrated by the devices. However, each of the…
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