| Literature DB >> 25635093 |
Wanyi Nie1, Hsinhan Tsai2, Reza Asadpour3, Jean-Christophe Blancon2, Amanda J Neukirch4, Gautam Gupta1, Jared J Crochet2, Manish Chhowalla5, Sergei Tretiak6, Muhammad A Alam3, Hsing-Lin Wang7, Aditya D Mohite8.
Abstract
State-of-the-art photovoltaics use high-purity, large-area, wafer-scale single-crystalline semiconductors grown by sophisticated, high-temperature crystal growth processes. We demonstrate a solution-based hot-casting technique to grow continuous, pinhole-free thin films of organometallic perovskites with millimeter-scale crystalline grains. We fabricated planar solar cells with efficiencies approaching 18%, with little cell-to-cell variability. The devices show hysteresis-free photovoltaic response, which had been a fundamental bottleneck for the stable operation of perovskite devices. Characterization and modeling attribute the improved performance to reduced bulk defects and improved charge carrier mobility in large-grain devices. We anticipate that this technique will lead the field toward synthesis of wafer-scale crystalline perovskites, necessary for the fabrication of high-efficiency solar cells, and will be applicable to several other material systems plagued by polydispersity, defects, and grain boundary recombination in solution-processed thin films.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25635093 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaa0472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728