NiOx passivation in perovskite solar cells: from surface reactivity to device performance
John Mohanraj, Bipasa Samanta, Osbel Almora, Ren\'an Escalante, Lluis, F. Marsal, Sandra Jenatsch, Arno Gadola, Beat Ruhstaller, Juan A. Anta,, Maytal Caspary Toroker, Selina Olthof

TL;DR
This study investigates how surface passivation of NiOx in perovskite solar cells affects interface stability and device performance, revealing that improved structural stability does not always lead to better operational stability due to ion formation.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the effects of different passivation strategies on NiOx/perovskite interfaces using experimental and theoretical methods, providing insights into degradation mechanisms.
Findings
Passivation affects NiOx and perovskite structural stability.
Structural stability does not always correlate with operational stability.
Excess ion formation at the interface reduces device performance.
Abstract
Non-stoichiometric nickel oxide (NiOx) is the only metal oxide successfully used as hole transport material in p-i-n type perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Its favorable opto-electronic properties and facile large-scale preparation methods are potentially relevant for future commercialization of PSCs, though currently low operational stability of PSCs containing NiOx hole transport layers are reported. Poorly understood degradation reactions at the interface to the perovskite are seen as cause for the inferior stability and a variety of interface passivation approaches have been shown to be effective in improving the overall solar cell performance. To gain a better understanding of the processes happening at this interface, we systematically passivated possible specific defects on NiOx with three different categories of organic/inorganic compounds. The effects on the NiOx and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPerovskite Materials and Applications · Conducting polymers and applications · Chalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films
