Researchers use liquid crystals to advance PSC commercialization
A research team, led by Northwestern scientists, has developed a method that could moves perovskite solar cells closer to industry adoption and widespread use. Using liquid crystals that can respond to temperature change and avoid accumulating precipitation, the group enabled the protection of large-area perovskite films.
This approach led to a 22% efficiency and a stabilized efficiency of 21% for solar modules with enhanced damp heat (85% relative humidity at 85 degrees Celsius) stability and a size of 31 sq. centimeters.
Project P4SPACE to advance development of perovskite photovoltaics for space environment
The EU-funded P4SPACE project started in April 2023 and will run until the end of March 2025.
The project will develop and scale-up PSCs with high performance and durability in harsh space environments. It will aim to deliver sustainable PV technology for any present and future space environment application.
Researchers report sulfonium-based treatment for perovskite films that yields extremely stable perovskite solar cells
A collaborative team of researchers, including ones from Uppsala University, CNR-SCITEC, Fraunhofer ISE, University of Cambridge, Empa, EPFL and additional institutes, recently introduced an unexplored dimethylphenethylsulfonium iodide (DMPESI) molecule to post-treat formamidinium lead iodide perovskite films. The treated films showed outstanding stability upon light soaking and remarkably remains in black-phase after 2 years ageing under ambient condition without encapsulation.
Fresh and 24-month aged unencapsulated perovskite film (1.0 cm by 2.0 cm) without and with DMPESI treatment of different concentrations. Image from Nature Energy
The DMPESI-treated PSCs deliver a breakthrough record in operational stability of highly-efficient PSCs with less than 1% performance loss after more than 4500 h at maximum power point tracking, yielding an extraordinarily high theoretical T80 of over 9 years under continuous 1-sun illumination, which would correspond to a photon flux of an outdoor PV installation in Sweden or Germany (1,000 kWh m−2 per year) of over 78 years.
Researchers use hole-selective contact on light-managing textured substrates for efficient and stable inverted PSCs
Inverted perovskite solar cells (PSCs) can deliver enhanced operating stability compared to their 'normal'-structure counterparts. To improve efficiency further, it is vital to combine effective light management with low interfacial losses. Now, scientists at Northwestern University, University of Kentucky, North Carolina State University, University of Toronto, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and Peking University have developed a conformal self-assembled monolayer (SAM) as the hole-selective contact on light-managing textured substrates.
The team reported that molecular dynamics simulations indicate cluster formation during phosphonic acid adsorption leads to incomplete SAM coverage. They devised a co-adsorbent strategy that disassembles high-order clusters, thus homogenizing the distribution of phosphonic acid molecules, thereby minimizing interfacial recombination and improving electronic structures.
Researchers design 2D/3D perovskite solar cell with efficiency of 25.32%
Researchers from Switzerland's Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and Peking University have developed a perovskite solar cell with a 2D/3D heterojunction architecture.
The cell uses a 2D perovskite layer at the interface between the perovskite and the hole transport layer, which the researchers said can improve charge-carrier transport/extraction while suppressing ion migration. Cells with this architecture usually exhibit large exciton binding energies and are generally more stable than conventional 3D devices due to the protection provided by the organic ligands.
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