Abstract

Anti-solvent assisted crystallization is commonly employed method to achieve high-quality perovskites attributed to its great operability. Herein, we report an anti-solvent engineering approach via simply using potassium bromide (KBr) additive with commonly used chlorobenzene (CB) in triple-cation perovskite solar cells (PSCs). We show that the KBr additive in the CB anti-solvent not only increases the crystallinity and passivates the perovskite top surface defects, but also leads to suppressed nonradiative recombination and facilitates charge extraction at interfaces. Interestingly, due to the halide vacancies filling with K + ions, hysteresis behavior in the treated perovskite layer was suppressed. Consequently, a champion power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 18.29% was yielded for anti-solvent engineering employing KBr (an 20% improvement in PCE compared to the CB-only anti-solvent device). Furthermore, the optimized device based on KBr demonstrated improved stability, maintaining 80% of its original efficiency after aging in an environment with a relative humidity of 30–50% for 1080 h. Our study reports the significant role of anti-solvent engineering in improving perovskite's quality for efficient PSCs and develops the potential for PSC commercialization. • KBr additive is used to modify the perovskite layer in perovskite solar cells. • The KBr treatment of perovskite leads to an improvement of carrier extraction. • A high- PCE of 17.39% is achieved.

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