Mar 25, 2019|Season 1, Episode 6
Research on perovskites has progressed rapidly for PV and LEDs, with new solar-cell efficiency records being set at a regular pace. There are hints of the first commercial products reaching the market by 2020, just a decade since perovskite photovoltaics were first discovered. MRS Bulletin presents the impact of a recent advance in this burgeoning field.
Read the abstract in Nature Energy (doi:10.1038/s41560-018-0278-x).
Researchers have made an all-perovskite tandem solar cell with a record high power-conversion efficiency of 21%.
Tandem solar cells are more efficient than a single cell because each device in the stack can be tailored to absorb a different part of the light spectrum. Tandem perovskite/silicon cells are closer to market, but all-perovskite tandem cells would be easier and less costly.
Making an all-perovskite tandem cell that is efficient has been a challenge. The bottom device in a tandem cell is prepared with a low-bandgap material to absorb all of the infrared photons passing through the top device. Despite many efforts, researchers have had difficulty making high-quality low-bandgap perovskite absorber layers.
At the University of Toledo, Yanfa Yan and his colleagues made a high-quality layer by introducing 2.5% chlorine into a mixed tin–lead perovskite. This increased the grain size and crystallinity of the layer and reduced electronic disorder, which quashed the charge-carrier recombinations that produce heat and boost efficiency of the tandem cell. The cell retains 85% of this efficiency after 80 hours.
This work was published in a recent issue of Nature Energy. My name is Bob Braughler from the Materials Research Society.
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