High-efficiency solution-processed perovskite solar cells with millimeter-scale grains

Wanyi Nie(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Hsinhan Tsai(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Reza Asadpour(Purdue University West Lafayette), Jean‐Christophe Blancon(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Amanda J. Neukirch(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Gautam Gupta(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Jared Crochet(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Manish Chhowalla(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Sergei Tretiak(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Muhammad A. Alam(Purdue University West Lafayette), Hsing-Lin Wang(Los Alamos National Laboratory), Aditya D. Mohite(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Science
January 29, 2015
Cited by 3,257Open Access
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Abstract

State-of-the-art photovoltaics use high-purity, large-area, wafer-scale single-crystalline semiconductors grown by sophisticated, high-temperature crystal growth processes. We demonstrate a solution-based hot-casting technique to grow continuous, pinhole-free thin films of organometallic perovskites with millimeter-scale crystalline grains. We fabricated planar solar cells with efficiencies approaching 18%, with little cell-to-cell variability. The devices show hysteresis-free photovoltaic response, which had been a fundamental bottleneck for the stable operation of perovskite devices. Characterization and modeling attribute the improved performance to reduced bulk defects and improved charge carrier mobility in large-grain devices. We anticipate that this technique will lead the field toward synthesis of wafer-scale crystalline perovskites, necessary for the fabrication of high-efficiency solar cells, and will be applicable to several other material systems plagued by polydispersity, defects, and grain boundary recombination in solution-processed thin films.


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