Stable Perovskite Solar Cells via exfoliated graphite as an ion diffusion-blocking layer
Abdullah S. Alharbi, Miqad S. Albishi, Temur Maksudov, Tariq F., Alhuwaymel, Chrysa Aivalioti, Kadi S. AlShebl, Naif R. Alshamrani, Furkan H., Isikgor, Mubarak Aldosari, Majed M. Aljomah, Konstantinos Petridis, Thomas D., Anthopoulos, George Kakavelakis, Essa A. Alharbi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simple spray-coated exfoliated graphite layer that effectively blocks ion diffusion and humidity ingress in perovskite solar cells, significantly improving their efficiency and operational stability.
Contribution
The study presents a novel, scalable exfoliated graphite interlayer that reduces ion diffusion and enhances stability in perovskite solar cells, a strategy not previously explored.
Findings
Reduced ion diffusion and defect formation
Achieved 25% power conversion efficiency
Enhanced device operational stability
Abstract
Ion and metal diffusion in metal halide perovskites, charge-transporting layers, and electrodes are detrimental to the performance and stability of perovskite-based photovoltaic devices. As a result, there is an intense research interest in developing novel defect and ion diffusion mitigation strategies. We present a simple, low-cost, scalable, and highly effective method that uses spray-coated exfoliated graphite interlayers to block ion and metal diffusion and humidity ingress within the perovskite, the hole transport material, and metal electrodes. The influence of inserting the exfoliated graphite films on the structural, surface morphology, and optoelectronic properties were examined through various methods, including X-ray diffraction, Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry, Scanning electron microscope, atomic force microscopy, Current-voltage (J-V) characteristics,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPerovskite Materials and Applications · Conducting polymers and applications
