Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Inorganic perovskite absorbers for use in thin-film solar cells

04.29.19 | Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C)

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C) provide clear calls and strong noise reduction for interviews, conferences, and noisy field environments.


Teams all over the world are working intensively on the development of perovskite solar cells. The focus is on what are known as metal-organic hybrid perovskites whose crystal structure is composed of inorganic elements such as lead and iodine as well as an organic molecule.

Completely inorganic perovskite semiconductors such as CsPbI3 have the same crystalline structure as hybrid perovskites, but contain an alkali metal such as caesium instead of an organic molecule. This makes them much more stable than hybrid perovskites, but usually requires an extra production step at very high temperature - several hundred degrees Celsius. For this reason, inorganic perovskite semiconductors have thus far been difficult to integrate into thin-film solar cells that cannot withstand high temperatures. A team headed by Dr. Thomas Unold has now succeeded in producing inorganic perovskite semiconductors at moderate temperatures so that they might also be used in thin-film cells in the future.

The physicists designed an innovative experiment in which they synthesised and analysed many combinations of material within a single sample. Using co-evaporation of caesium-iodide and lead-iodide, they produced thin layers of CsPbI3, systematically varying the amounts of these elements, while the substrate-temperature was less than 60 degrees Celsius.

"A combinatorial research approach like this allows us to find optimal production parameters for new material systems much faster than with the conventional approach that typically requires 100 samples to be produced for 100 different compositions", explains Unold. Through careful analysis during synthesis and the subsequent measurements of the optoelectronic properties, they were able to determine how the composition of the thin film affects the material properties.

Their measurements show that the structural as well as important optoelectronic properties of the material are sensitive to the ratio of caesium to lead. Thus, excess caesium promotes a stable perovskite phase with good mobility and lifetimes of the charge carriers.

In cooperation with the HZB Young Investigator Group of Prof. Steve Albrecht, these optimized CsPbI3 layers were used to demonstrate perovskite solar cells with an initial efficiency of more than 12 % and stable performance close to 11% for over 1200 hours. "We have shown that inorganic perovskite absorbers might also be suitable for use in thin-film solar cells if they can be manufactured adequately. We believe that there is great room for further improvements", says Unold.

###

Published in Advanced Energy Materials (2019):

"Low temperature synthesis of stable CsPbI3 perovskite layers for solar cells obtained by high throughput experimentation"; Pascal Becker, José A. Márquez, Justus Just, Amran Al-Ashouri, Charles Hages, Hannes Hempel, Marko Jošt, Steve Albrecht, Ronald Frahm and Thomas Unold.

Advanced Energy Materials

10.1002/aenm.201900555

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie. (2019, April 29). Inorganic perovskite absorbers for use in thin-film solar cells. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WWG2KD1/inorganic-perovskite-absorbers-for-use-in-thin-film-solar-cells.html
MLA:
"Inorganic perovskite absorbers for use in thin-film solar cells." Brightsurf News, Apr. 29 2019, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WWG2KD1/inorganic-perovskite-absorbers-for-use-in-thin-film-solar-cells.html.