Lead-Free Perovskite Homojunction-Based HTM-Free Perovskite Solar Cells: Theoretical and Experimental Viewpoints

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mdpi

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Metallurgical and Materials Engineering
(2004)
The main fields of operation for Metallurgical and Materials Engineering are production of engineering materials, defining and improving their features, as well as developing new materials to meet the expectations at every aspect of life and the users from these aspects. Founded in 2004 and graduated its 10th-semester alumni in 2018, our Department also obtained MÜDEK accreditation in the latter year. Offering the opportunity to hold an internationally valid diploma through the accreditation in question, our Department has highly qualified and experienced Academic Staff. Many of the courses offered at our Department are supported with various practice sessions, and internship studies in summer. This way, we help our students become better-equipped engineers for their future professional lives. With the Cooperative Education curriculum that entered into effect in 2019, students may volunteer to work at contracted companies for a period of six months with no extensions to their period of study.

Journal Issue

Abstract

Simplifying the design of lead-free perovskite solar cells (PSCs) has drawn a lot of interest due to their low manufacturing cost and relative non-toxic nature. Focus has been placed mostly on reducing the toxic lead element and eliminating the requirement for expensive hole transport materials (HTMs). However, in terms of power conversion efficiency (PCE), the PSCs using all charge transport materials surpass the environmentally beneficial HTM-free PSCs. The low PCEs of the lead-free HTM-free PSCs could be linked to poorer hole transport and extraction as well as lower light harvesting. In this context, a lead-free perovskite homojunction-based HTM-free PSC was investigated, and the performance was then assessed using a Solar Cell Capacitance Simulator (SCAPS). A two-step method was employed to fabricate lead-free perovskite homojunction-based HTM-free PSCs in order to validate the simulation results. The simulation results show that high hole mobility and a narrow band gap of cesium tin iodide (CsSnI3) boosted the hole collection and absorption spectrum, respectively. Additionally, the homojunction's built-in electric field, which was identified using SCAPS simulations, promoted the directed transport of the photo-induced charges, lowering carrier recombination losses. Homojunction-based HTM-free PSCs having a CsSnI3 layer with a thickness of 100 nm, defect density of 10(15) cm(-3), and interface defect density of 10(18) cm(-3) were found to be capable of delivering high PCEs under a working temperature of 300 K. When compared to formamidinium tin iodide (FASnI(3))-based devices, the open-circuit voltage (V-oc), short-circuit density (J(sc)), fill factor (FF), and PCE of FASnI(3)/CsSnI3 homojunction-based HTM-free PSCs were all improved from 0.66 to 0.78 V, 26.07 to 27.65 mA cm(-2), 76.37 to 79.74%, and 14.62 to 19.03%, respectively. In comparison to a FASnI(3)-based device (PCE = 8.94%), an experimentally fabricated device using homojunction of FASnI(3)/CsSnI3 performs better with V-oc of 0.84 V, J(sc) of 22.06 mA cm(-2), FF of 63.50%, and PCE of 11.77%. Moreover, FASnI(3)/CsSnI3-based PSC is more stable over time than its FASnI(3)-based counterpart, preserving 89% of its initial PCE. These findings provide promising guidelines for developing highly efficient and environmentally friendly HTM-free PSCs based on perovskite homojunction.

Description

Park, Jongee/0000-0003-1415-6906; Sajid, Sajid/0000-0002-1165-1365; Ben Salem, Imen/0000-0002-3035-0402

Keywords

lead-free, HTM-free PSC, high efficiency, simulation, experiment

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Citation

6

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Source

Volume

13

Issue

6

Start Page

End Page

Collections