Abstract

An efficient substrate-configuration p–i–n metal-halide perovskite solar cell (PSC) is fabricated on a polymer-coated steel substrate. The optimized cell employs a Ti bottom electrode coated with a thin indium tin oxide (ITO) interlayer covered with a self-assembled [2-(9H-carbazol-9-yl)ethyl]phosphonic acid monolayer as a hole-selective contact. A triple-cation perovskite is used as the absorber layer. Thermally evaporated C60 and atomic layer deposited SnO2 layers serve to create an electron-selective contact. The cells use an ITO top electrode with an antireflective MgF2 coating. The optimized cell fabricated on a polymer-coated steel substrate reaches a power conversion efficiency of 16.5%, which approaches the 18.4% efficiency of a p–i–n reference superstrate-configuration cell that uses a similar stack design. Optical simulations suggest that the remaining optical losses are due to the absorption of light by the ITO top electrode, the C60 layer, the Ti bottom electrode, and reflection from the MgF2 coating in almost equal amounts. The major loss is, however, in the fill factor as a result of an increased sheet resistance of the top ITO electrode.

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