Publication | Open Access
Peptide‐Based Ammonium Halide with Inhibited Deprotonation Enabling Effective Interfacial Engineering for Highly Efficient and Stable FAPbI<sub>3</sub> Perovskite Solar Cells
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Citations
29
References
2024
Year
Ammonium IodidesEngineeringPeptide‐based Ammonium HalideHalide PerovskitesOptoelectronic DevicesChemistryPerovskite ModulePhotovoltaicsChemical EngineeringSolar Cell StructuresHybrid MaterialsHighly EfficientMaterials ScienceThermal StabilitiesPerovskite FilmsPerovskite MaterialsLead-free PerovskitesPerovskite Solar CellSolar CellsFunctional MaterialsSolar Cell Materials
Abstract Ammonium iodides are intensively investigated as effective interfacial passivation agents in perovskite solar cells (PSCs) while facing a major challenge of their high reactivity with perovskites that undermines the operational stability of the PSCs. Exemplified by involving rationally designed/selected peptide into the widely adopted phenethylammonium iodide (PEAI), the present work demonstrates that the bespoke peptide‐PEAI can effectively inhibit the deprotonation of ammonium iodides and thus hinder the formation of 2D perovskite, facilitating the stability enhancement in perovskite films by multi hydrogen bonding. The additional lone pair electrons provided by peptide molecules can also enhance the passivation ability of the modified layer. Attributed to the stable co‐modifier peptide‐PEAI, the small‐area FAPbI 3 ‐based PSCs yield a high efficiency of 25.02% with robust light and thermal stabilities. Moreover, the peptide‐PEAI‐based minimodules with an efficiency of 19.06% for a total area of 36 cm 2 manifested the great application potential of this co‐modification strategy in the perovskite photovoltaics.
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