Abstract

Severe nonradiative recombination and open-circuit voltage loss triggered by high-density interface defects greatly restrict the continuous improvement of Sn-based perovskite solar cells (Sn-PVSCs). Herein, a novel amphoteric semiconductor, O-pivaloylhydroxylammonium trifluoromethanesulfonate (PHAAT), is developed to manage interface defects and carrier dynamics of Sn-PVSCs. The amphiphilic ionic modulators containing multiple Lewis-base functional groups can synergistically passivate anionic and cationic defects while coordinating with uncoordinated Sn2+ to compensate for surface charge and alleviate the Sn2+ oxidation. Especially, the sulfonate anions raise the energy barrier of surface oxidation, relieve lattice distortion, and inhibit nonradiative recombination by passivating Sn-related and I-related deep-level defects. Furthermore, the strong coupling between PHAAT and Sn perovskite induces the transition of the surface electronic state from p-type to n-type, thus creating an extra back-surface field to accelerate electron extraction. Consequently, the PHAAT-treated device exhibits a champion efficiency of 13.94% with negligible hysteresis. The device without any encapsulation maintains 94.7% of its initial PCE after 2000h of storage and 91.6% of its initial PCE after 1000h of continuous illumination. This work provides a reliable strategy to passivate interface defects and construct p-n homojunction to realize efficient and stable Sn-based perovskite photovoltaic devices.

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