Rubidium Multication Perovskite with Optimized Bandgap for Perovskite‐Silicon Tandem with over 26% Efficiency

The Duong(Australian National University), Yiliang Wu(Australian National University), Heping Shen(Australian National University), Jun Peng(Australian National University), Xiao Fu(Australian National University), Daniel A. Jacobs(Australian National University), Er‐Chien Wang(Australian National University), Teng Kho(Australian National University), Kean Chern Fong(Australian National University), Matthew Stocks(Australian National University), Evan Franklin(Australian National University), Andrew Blakers(Australian National University), Ngwe Zin(University of Central Florida), Keith R. McIntosh(Lighthouse Guild), Wei Li(Monash University), Yi‐Bing Cheng(Monash University), Thomas P. White(Australian National University), Klaus Weber(Australian National University), Kylie Catchpole(Australian National University)
Advanced Energy Materials
April 4, 2017
Cited by 514Open Access
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Abstract

Rubidium (Rb) is explored as an alternative cation to use in a novel multication method with the formamidinium/methylammonium/cesium (Cs) system to obtain 1.73 eV bangap perovskite cells with negligible hysteresis and steady state efficiency as high as 17.4%. The study shows the beneficial effect of Rb in improving the crystallinity and suppressing defect migration in the perovskite material. The light stability of the cells examined under continuous illumination of 12 h is improved upon the addition of Cs and Rb. After several cycles of 12 h light–dark, the cell retains 90% of its initial efficiency. In parallel, sputtered transparent conducting oxide thin films are developed to be used as both rear and front transparent contacts on quartz substrate with less than 5% parasitic absorption of near infrared wavelengths. Using these developments, semi‐transparent perovskite cells are fabricated with steady state efficiency of up to 16.0% and excellent average transparency of ≈84% between 720 and 1100 nm. In a tandem configuration using a 23.9% silicon cell, 26.4% efficiency (10.4% from the silicon cell) in a mechanically stacked tandem configuration is demonstrated which is very close to the current record for a single junction silicon cell of 26.6%.


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