| Literature DB >> 28738159 |
The Duong1, Hemant Kumar Mulmudi1, YiLiang Wu1, Xiao Fu1, Heping Shen1, Jun Peng1, Nandi Wu1, Hieu T Nguyen1, Daniel Macdonald1, Mark Lockrey2, Thomas P White1, Klaus Weber1, Kylie Catchpole1.
Abstract
Perovskite material with a bandgap of 1.7-1.8 eV is highly desirable for the top cell in a tandem configuration with a lower bandgap bottom cell, such as a silicon cell. This can be achieved by alloying iodide and bromide anions, but light-induced phase-segregation phenomena are often observed in perovskite films of this kind, with implications for solar cell efficiency. Here, we investigate light-induced phase segregation inside quadruple-cation perovskite material in a complete cell structure and find that the magnitude of this phenomenon is dependent on the operating condition of the solar cell. Under short-circuit and even maximum power point conditions, phase segregation is found to be negligible compared to the magnitude of segregation under open-circuit conditions. In accordance with the finding, perovskite cells based on quadruple-cation perovskite with 1.73 eV bandgap retain 94% of the original efficiency after 12 h operation at the maximum power point, while the cell only retains 82% of the original efficiency after 12 h operation at the open-circuit condition. This result highlights the need to have standard methods including light/dark and bias condition for testing the stability of perovskite solar cells. Additionally, phase segregation is observed when the cell was forward biased at 1.2 V in the dark, which indicates that photoexcitation is not required to induce phase segregation.Entities:
Keywords: high bandgap; perovskite; phase segregation; solar cell; stability; tandem
Year: 2017 PMID: 28738159 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b06816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229