All-perovskite tandem solar cells with improved grain surface passivation

Renxing Lin(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Jian Xu(University of Toronto), Mingyang Wei(University of Toronto), Yurui Wang(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Zhengyuan Qin(Nanjing University), Zhou Liu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Jinlong Wu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Ke Xiao(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Bin Chen(University of Toronto), So Min Park(University of Toronto), Gang Chen(ShanghaiTech University), Harindi R. Atapattu(University of Kentucky), Kenneth R. Graham(University of Kentucky), Jun Xu(Nanjing University), Jia Zhu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Ludong Li(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Chunfeng Zhang(Nanjing University), Edward H. Sargent(University of Toronto), Hairen Tan(Nanjing University)
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics
January 1, 2000
Cited by 917

Abstract

Abstract All-perovskite tandem solar cells hold the promise of surpassing the efficiency limits of single-junction solar cells1–3; however, until now, the best-performing all-perovskite tandem solar cells have exhibited lower certified efficiency than have single-junction perovskite solar cells4, 5. A thick mixed Pb–Sn narrow-bandgap subcell is needed to achieve high photocurrent density in tandem solar cells6, yet this is challenging owing to the short carrier diffusion length within Pb–Sn perovskites. Here we develop ammonium-cation-passivated Pb–Sn perovskites with long diffusion lengths, enabling subcells that have an absorber thickness of approximately 1.2 μm. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that widely used phenethylammonium cations are only partially adsorbed on the surface defective sites at perovskite crystallization temperatures. The passivator adsorption is predicted to be enhanced using 4-trifluoromethyl-phenylammonium (CF3-PA), which exhibits a stronger perovskite surface-passivator interaction than does phenethylammonium. By adding a small amount of CF3-PA into the precursor solution, we increase the carrier diffusion length within Pb–Sn perovskites twofold, to over 5 μm, and increase the efficiency of Pb–Sn perovskite solar cells to over 22%. We report a certified efficiency of 26.4% in all-perovskite tandem solar cells, which exceeds that of the best-performing single-junction perovskite solar cells. Encapsulated tandem devices retain more than 90% of their initial performance after 600 h of operation at the maximum power point under 1 Sun illumination in ambient conditions.


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