Researchers at EPFL in Switzerland have reported on the use of Flash Infrared Annealing (FIRA) to rapidly produce efficient, stable perovskite solar cells.
FIRA shares many characteristics with thermal annealing techniques already used to grow pure crystal phases for the semiconductor industry. It works by using a short IR pulse to rapidly nucleate a perovskite film from a precursor solution, without the need for a high-temperature scaffold. The high speed and relatively low processing temperatures mean that FIRA is compatible with large-area deposition techniques, like roll-to-roll processing. For PSCs, it could offer a practical route to scaling-up production.
Devices made in this manner displayed power conversion efficiencies of over 20%, which the authors say demonstrates 'that FIRA can be used as a standard method for fast production, high performance and highly reproducibly manufactured devices'. The shorter annealing time reduces the energy requirements for the process, while also speeding it up. In a separate work, the same authors report that their FIRA method has 'only 8% of the environmental impact and 2% of the fabrication cost of the perovskite active layer' compared to the antisolvent method currently used to produce thin films for lab-scale cells. Although this second study looked at a different perovskite composition, taken together, these results suggest that FIRA has huge potential as a practical fabrication route for PSCs.
Comments
The applicability of FIRA for R2R process
Dear Ladies and Gentlemen
I thank you and the authors for this precious works, FIRA. I wish this FIRA could be used for manufacturing flex PSA through roll to roll process, but I am afraid the high temperature(200 deg C) during FIRA might damage the heat sensitive PET substrate. Is my hope too much?
Best regards