Abstract

Perovskite solar cells (PSC) are emerging technologies that have shown continuous improvement in power conversion efficiency (PCE) and stability. However, a very important aspect that has been seldom considered is the reproducibility of PCE of PSC devices. It is possible to achieve PCE from 10.21% to 17.05% using scalable slot‐die‐coating technique. However, a spatial distribution of performance is clearly observed for device samples on a 4 × 4 cm substrate. The relatively low PCE is mainly coming from the losses of electrical mechanism. To have in‐depth understanding of the losses, the dominant loss analysis techniques including numerical simulations are used to explore the mechanism. In the results, it is indicated that a part of efficiency decrease is due to the increase of bulk defect density which linearly changes with the quality of the perovskite layer and related to recombination process. However, extremely high‐charge‐carrier transportation losses are found at the HTL/perovskite interface that are related to the Fermi‐level pinning mechanism for low‐efficiency device. The result of physics insight of perovskite solar cells leads to a strategy, where chemical passivation technique is used to achieve the PCE from 13.81% to 18.07% for the batch of devices with good reproducibility.

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