Royal Society of Chemistry
- Pérovskite
Hole-transport layer-dependent degradation mechanisms in perovskite solar modules
Auteurs Marco Casareto, Saivineeth Penukula, Wanyi Nie c and Nicholas Rolston
Résumé
It is imperative to understand how the design of perovskite solar modules (PSMs) affects their degradation mechanisms and byproducts under environmental stressors to enable their long-term reliability. This work reports on the impact of the hole-transport layer (HTL) on thermal cyclability and degradation mechanisms of p–i–n PSMs by comparing 3 HTLs: NiOx, MeO-2PACz (a self-assembled monolayer), and a bilayer HTL of MeO-2PACz on NiOx. We observe surprising thermal cyclability from a performance standpoint despite generating clear degradation products. We find that without a fully dense HTL, seemingly insignificant moisture/oxygen ingress through the edge of the PSMs can lead to rapid destabilization of the metal halide perovskite (MHP) layer due to reactions between MHP degradation byproducts and the indium-tin oxide layer. We also show that illumination-induced cation phase segregation is dependent on the illumination of an inactive area (regions of the substrate uncovered by the rear electrode). As such, we find that a dense interface between the MHP and ITO is necessary for chemically robust PSMs and highlight criteria for testing field-relevant configurations in lab-scale architectures.