Dec 3, 2024
8:00pm - 10:00pm
Hynes, Level 1, Hall A
Philippe Holzhey1,2,Michael Prettl3,Silvia Collavini4,Nathan Chang5,Michael Saliba6,7
Adolph Merkel Institute1,Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin2,Vrije Universiteit3,San Sebastian4,University of New South Wales5,Universität Stuttgart6,Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH7
Philippe Holzhey1,2,Michael Prettl3,Silvia Collavini4,Nathan Chang5,Michael Saliba6,7
Adolph Merkel Institute1,Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin2,Vrije Universiteit3,San Sebastian4,University of New South Wales5,Universität Stuttgart6,Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH7
Metal-halide perovskites have emerged as a promising class of next-generation solar cells. Here, we assess what lifetimes and efficiencies perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have to reach to lower the price of commercial residential photovoltaic (PV) further. We find that using light and flexible substrates, as opposed to heavy and rigid ones, reduces the total installed system cost of PSCs. The flexibility and lighter weight culminate in a lower balance of systems (BOS) cost, as it is possible to use different mounting methods. Concretely, we analyse the scenario when the modules are directly stuck onto a roof without requiring a racking. That reduces both labour and material costs. This effectively lowers the necessary efficiency or lifetime of PSCs (T80 value) required to achieve the same electricity cost as commercialised silicon. We find that a rigid perovskite module with 17% efficiency would need at least 24 years to be competitive with residential-installed silicon. In comparison, a light, flexible module with the same efficiency would only need to last 19 years. We find that flexible PSCs present a most promising commercialisation route because they can enable low manufacturing and BOS deployment costs, which opens up commercial viability at lower efficiencies or lifetimes. Finally, we extend our analysis toward tandem structures with perovskite-silicon or all-perovskite tandem architectures. (1)<br/><br/>P. Holzhey et al., Toward commercialization with lightweight, flexible perovskite solar cells for residential photovoltaics, Joule (2023), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joule.2022.12.01