SOLAR DAILY
A general approach to high-efficiency perovskite solar cells
by Staff Writers
Dresden, Germany (SPX) Mar 29, 2021

Researchers from the Institute for Applied Physics (IAP) and the Center for Advancing Electronics Dresden (cfaed) at TU Dresden developed a general methodology for the reproducible fabrication of high efficiency perovskite solar cells. Their study has been published in the renowned journal Nature Communications.

Perovskites, a class of materials first reported in the early 19th century, were "re-discovered" in 2009 as a possible candidate for power generation via their use in solar cells. Since then, they have taken the photovoltaic (PV) research community by storm, reaching new record efficiencies at an unprecedented pace.

This improvement has been so rapid that by 2021, barely more than a decade of research later, they are already achieving performance similar to conventional silicon devices. What makes perovskites especially promising is the manner in which they can be created.

Where silicon-based devices are heavy and require high temperatures for fabrication, perovskite devices can be lightweight and formed with minimal energy investiture. It is this combination - high performance and facile fabrication - which has excited the research community.

As the performance of perovskite photovoltaics rocketed upward, left behind were some of the supporting developments needed to make a commercially viable technology. One issue that continues to plague perovskite development is device reproducibility. While some PV devices can be made with the desired level of performance, others made in the exact same manner often have significantly lower efficiencies, puzzling and frustrating the research community.

Recently, researchers from the Emerging Electronic Technologies Group of Prof. Yana Vaynzof have identified that fundamental processes that occur during the perovskite film formation strongly influence the reproducibility of the photovoltaic devices. When depositing the perovskite layer from solution, an antisolvent is dripped onto the perovskite solution to trigger its crystallization.

"We found that the duration for which the perovskite was exposed to the antisolvent had a dramatic impact on the final device performance, a variable which had, until now, gone unnoticed in the field." says Dr. Alexander Taylor, a postdoctoral research associate in the Vaynzof group and the first author on the study.

"This is related to the fact that certain antisolvents may at least partly dissolve the precursors of the perovskite layer, thus altering its final composition. Additionally, the miscibility of antisolvents with the perovskite solution solvents influences their efficacy in triggering crystallization."

These results reveal that, as researchers fabricate their PV devices, differences in this antisolvent step could cause the observed irreproducibility in performance. Going further, the authors tested a wide range of potential antisolvents, and showed that by controlling for these phenomena, they could obtain cutting-edge performance from nearly every candidate tested.

"By identifying the key antisolvent characteristics that influence the quality of the perovskite active layers, we are also able to predict the optimal processing for new antisolvents, thus eliminating the need for the tedious trial-and-error optimization so common in the field." adds Dr. Fabian Paulus, leader of the Transport in Hybrid Materials Group at cfaed and a contributor to the study.

"Another important aspect of our study is the fact that we demonstrate how an optimal application of an antisolvent can significantly widen the processibility window of perovskite photovoltaic devices" notes Prof. Vaynzof, who led the work. "Our results offer the perovskite research community valuable insights necessary for the advancement of this promising technology into a commercial product."

Research Report: "A general approach to high-efficiency perovskite solar cells by any antisolvent"


Related Links
Technische UniversitAt Dresden
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
A new dye shakes up solar cells
Lausanne, Switzerland (SPX) Mar 19, 2021
In 1991, scientists Brian O'Regan and Michael Gratzel at EPFL published a seminal paper describing a new type of solar cell: the dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC), also known as "Gratzel cell". Simple and cheap to build while being flexible and versatile, DSSCs are already manufactured on a multi-megawatt scale, cutting a significant slice of the photovoltaic market, which currently supplies almost 3% of all the world's electricity, well in the race to reduce carbon emissions. Now, Dan Zhang ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Northrop Grumman Common Infrared Countermeasures System ready for full-rate production

Israel says Iron Dome can now intercept drones, missiles at same time

Missile Defense Agency to consider two sites for Hawaii-based radar

SPY-7 joint Japan project completes initial demonstration of capability

SOLAR DAILY
Lockheed Martin's Extended-Range Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System Soars In Flight Test

Raytheon receives $74M contract for AMRAAM missile integration

U.S. Military, industry executives, government and researchers to attend Hypersonic Weapons Summit

Guam gets a Standoff Missile Complex in $42M contract award

SOLAR DAILY
Navy plan for MQ-25A unmanned aircraft clears last hurdle

LMT collaborates with Dimetor to enable connectivity in VLL airspace

Korea Aerospace Industries and Elbit Systems to Cooperate on Next-Gen UAS Solution for ISTAR Missions

Navy, Marines to focus on increasing drone infrastructure

SOLAR DAILY
Air Force exercises push data integration from across military domains

Airbus, Fujitsu and Thales in team up for UK army future tactical communication program

SES Government solutions provides high-throughput loopback services to US Dept of Defense

USAF: Anti-jamming tests of military communications satellites a success

SOLAR DAILY
Army tests oxygen generator with longer shelf life

AFRL partnership seeks to "engineer" improved human performance

Marines prepare for new, combat-oriented Annual Rifle Qualifications

Depleted uranium munitions didn't cause Gulf War Illness, study says

SOLAR DAILY
Lockheed Martin well-positioned to capitalize on key technologies with Aerojet Rocketdyne acquisition

NATO chief says defence spending up despite pandemic

Arms exports stop rising for first time since early 2000s: report

Russia's arms sales in 2020 'successful' despite pandemic

SOLAR DAILY
Philippines spots hundreds of Chinese 'militia' boats near disputed reef

With Russia and China, Biden reveals diplomatic style: no kid gloves

Philippines accuses China of 'incursion' in disputed sea

China dominates Pentagon chief's first India visit

SOLAR DAILY
New "metalens" shifts focus without tilting or moving

Nanowire could provide a stable, easy-to-make superconducting transistor

New technique builds super-hard metals from nanoparticles

Scientists see competition of magnetic orders from 2D sheets of atoms