Affiliation:
1. School of Chemical Engineering and Light Industry Guangdong University of Technology Guangzhou 510006 China
2. College of Electronic and Optical Engineering & College of Flexible Electronics (Future Technology) Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications Nanjing 210023 P. R. China
3. School of Materials and Energy Guangdong University of Technology Guangzhou 510006 China
4. Jieyang Branch of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Guangdong Laboratory Jieyang 515200 China
Abstract
AbstractPerovskite interfaces where defects enrich are pivotal for both device efficiency and stability. Herein, a high‐molecular‐weight polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP) is proposed as a robust multi‐functional interlayer to engineer the buried interface. Besides the well‐known defect passivation, perovskite crystallization is intriguingly modulated via the formation of hydrogen‐bond‐based polymer‐ammonium intermediates (e.g., PVP‐FA+ or PVP‐MA+, where MA and FA are methylamine and formamidine, respectively). The interaction energies derived from density functional theory calculations (−34.5, −26.8, and −9.9 kcal mol−1 for PVP‐FA+, PVP‐MA+, and PVP‐Pb2+) suggest that PVP predominately interacts with ammonium cations to form the intermediates, thus largely excluding other chemical interactions and retarding the perovskite crystallization. As such, the hydrophilic PVP interlayer leads to spontaneous perovskite spreading yet a counterintuitively similar nucleation density with respect to the hydrophobic poly[bis(4‐phenyl)(2,4,6‐trimethylphenyl)amine] (PTAA), a change of preferred crystal orientation, improved crystallinity, and remarkably suppressed non‐radiative recombination. These conducive effects jointly minimize the open‐circuit voltage loss and give rise to superior power conversion efficiency for small‐area and large‐area devices.
Funder
Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Key Research and Development Program of China
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献