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An Inorganic Hole Conductor for Organo-Lead Halide Perovskite Solar Cells. Improved Hole Conductivity with Copper Iodide
journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-15, 00:00 authored by Jeffrey
A. Christians, Raymond C. M. Fung, Prashant V. KamatOrgano-lead
halide perovskite solar cells have emerged as one of
the most promising candidates for the next generation of solar cells.
To date, these perovskite thin film solar cells have exclusively employed
organic hole conducting polymers which are often expensive and have
low hole mobility. In a quest to explore new inorganic hole conducting
materials for these perovskite-based thin film photovoltaics, we have
identified copper iodide as a possible alternative. Using copper iodide,
we have succeeded in achieving a promising power conversion efficiency
of 6.0% with excellent photocurrent stability. The open-circuit voltage,
compared to the best spiro-OMeTAD devices, remains low and is attributed
to higher recombination in CuI devices as determined by impedance
spectroscopy. However, impedance spectroscopy revealed that CuI exhibits
2 orders of magnitude higher electrical conductivity than spiro-OMeTAD
which allows for significantly higher fill factors. Reducing the recombination
in these devices could render CuI as a cost-effective competitor to
spiro-OMeTAD in perovskite solar cells.