A mixed-cation lead mixed-halide perovskite absorber for tandem solar cells

David P. McMeekin(University of Oxford), Golnaz Sadoughi(University of Oxford), Waqaas Rehman(University of Oxford), Giles E. Eperon(University of Oxford), Michael Saliba(University of Oxford), Maximilian T. Hörantner(University of Oxford), Amir A. Haghighirad(University of Oxford), Nobuya Sakai(University of Oxford), Lars Korte(Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie), B. Rech(Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie), Michael B. Johnston(University of Oxford), Laura M. Herz(University of Oxford), Henry J. Snaith(University of Oxford)
Science
January 7, 2016
Cited by 3,003Open Access
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Abstract

Metal halide perovskite photovoltaic cells could potentially boost the efficiency of commercial silicon photovoltaic modules from ∼20 toward 30% when used in tandem architectures. An optimum perovskite cell optical band gap of ~1.75 electron volts (eV) can be achieved by varying halide composition, but to date, such materials have had poor photostability and thermal stability. Here we present a highly crystalline and compositionally photostable material, [HC(NH2)2](0.83)Cs(0.17)Pb(I(0.6)Br(0.4))3, with an optical band gap of ~1.74 eV, and we fabricated perovskite cells that reached open-circuit voltages of 1.2 volts and power conversion efficiency of over 17% on small areas and 14.7% on 0.715 cm(2) cells. By combining these perovskite cells with a 19%-efficient silicon cell, we demonstrated the feasibility of achieving >25%-efficient four-terminal tandem cells.


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