| Literature DB >> 28256770 |
Yusheng Wang1, Zhouhui Xia1, Lijia Liu1, Weidong Xu1, Zhongcheng Yuan1, Yupeng Zhang2, Henning Sirringhaus3, Yeshayahu Lifshitz4, Shui-Tong Lee1, Qiaoliang Bao2, Baoquan Sun1.
Abstract
Solar cell generates electrical energy from light one via pulling excited carrier away under built-in asymmetry. Doped semiconductor with antireflection layer is general strategy to achieve this including crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cell. However, loss of extra energy beyond band gap and light reflection in particular wavelength range is known to hinder the efficiency of c-Si cell. Here, it is found that part of short wavelength sunlight can be converted into polarization electrical field, which strengthens asymmetry in organic-c-Si heterojunction solar cell through molecule alignment process. The light harvested by organometal trihalide perovskite nanoparticles (NPs) induces molecular alignment on a conducting polymer, which generates positive electrical surface field. Furthermore, a "field-effect solar cell" is successfully developed and implemented by combining perovskite NPs with organic/c-Si heterojunction associating with light-induced molecule alignment, which achieves an efficiency of 14.3%. In comparison, the device with the analogous structure without perovskite NPs only exhibits an efficiency of 12.7%. This finding provides a novel concept to design solar cell by sacrificing part of sunlight to provide "extra" asymmetrical field continuously as to drive photogenerated carrier toward respective contacts under direct sunlight. Moreover, it also points out a method to combine promising perovskite material with c-Si solar cell.Entities:
Keywords: field effect; light-induced; perovskite nanoparticles; polarization; solar cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 28256770 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201606370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849