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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(21): 27450-27462, 2024 May 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38751205

ABSTRACT

The long-term stability of perovskite solar cells (PSCs) remains a bottleneck for commercialization. While studies on the stoichiometry and morphology of PSCs with regard to performance are prevalent, understanding the influence of these factors on their long-term stability is lacking. In this work, we evaluate the impact of stoichiometry and morphology on the long-term stability of cesium formamidinium-based PSCs. We demonstrate that the lead iodide (PbI2) to formamidinium iodide (FAI) ratio influences stability under various stress factors (elevated temperature and light). A high molar ratio (PbI2/FAI > 1.1) in the perovskite precursor displays drastic degradation under ISOS-L1 (100 mW/cm2, 25 °C, maximum power point tracking) conditions. However, postdegradation analysis contradicts these results. Devices with PbI2/FAI ≤ 1.1 are stable under light, but intermittent current density-voltage characterizations indicate that device performance decreases during storage in the dark. Migration of iodide (I-) ions to the electron-transport layer (ETL) and iodine vacancies (VI-+) to the hole-transport layer (HTL) forms localized shunts in the absorber layer. Pinhole formation, surrounded by FA+-rich regions, explains the extent of damage in comparably aged films. In summary, this work emphasizes the importance of reporting stability under different stress conditions, coupled with postdegradation and dark recovery analyses of PSCs to better understand the complexities of perovskite instability under real-life conditions such as expected during outdoor operation.

2.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3372, 2024 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38643198

ABSTRACT

Optical interference filters (OIFs) are vital components for a wide range of optical and photonic systems. They are pivotal in controlling spectral transmission and reflection upon demand. OIFs rely on optical interference of the incident wave at multilayers, which are fabricated with nanometer precision. Here, we demonstrate that these requirements can be fulfilled by inkjet printing. This versatile technology offers a high degree of freedom in manufacturing, as well as cost-affordable and rapid-prototyping features from the micron to the meter scale. In this work, via rational ink design and formulation, OIFs were fully inkjet printed in ambient conditions. Longpass, shortpass, bandpass, and dichroic OIFs were fabricated, and precise control of the spectral response in OIFs was realized. Subsequently, customized lateral patterning of OIFs by inkjet printing was achieved. Furthermore, upscaling of the printed OIFs to A4 size (29.7 × 21.0 cm²) was demonstrated.

3.
Energy Environ Sci ; 17(8): 2800-2814, 2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38659971

ABSTRACT

The recent tremendous progress in monolithic perovskite-based double-junction solar cells is just the start of a new era of ultra-high-efficiency multi-junction photovoltaics. We report on triple-junction perovskite-perovskite-silicon solar cells with a record power conversion efficiency of 24.4%. Optimizing the light management of each perovskite sub-cell (∼1.84 and ∼1.52 eV for top and middle cells, respectively), we maximize the current generation up to 11.6 mA cm-2. Key to this achievement was our development of a high-performance middle perovskite sub-cell, employing a stable pure-α-phase high-quality formamidinium lead iodide perovskite thin film (free of wrinkles, cracks, and pinholes). This enables a high open-circuit voltage of 2.84 V in a triple junction. Non-encapsulated triple-junction devices retain up to 96.6% of their initial efficiency if stored in the dark at 85 °C for 1081 h.

4.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 11(14): e2308901, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38308172

ABSTRACT

Hybrid perovskite photovoltaics (PVs) promise cost-effective fabrication with large-scale solution-based manufacturing processes as well as high power conversion efficiencies. Almost all of today's high-performance solution-processed perovskite absorber films rely on so-called quenching techniques that rapidly increase supersaturation to induce a prompt crystallization. However, to date, there are no metrics for comparing results obtained with different quenching methods. In response, the first quantitative modeling framework for gas quenching, anti-solvent quenching, and vacuum quenching is developed herein. Based on dynamic thickness measurements in a vacuum chamber, previous works on drying dynamics, and commonly known material properties, a detailed analysis of mass transfer dynamics is performed for each quenching technique. The derived models are delivered along with an open-source software framework that is modular and extensible. Thereby, a deep understanding of the impact of each process parameter on mass transfer dynamics is provided. Moreover, the supersaturation rate at critical concentration is proposed as a decisive benchmark of quenching effectiveness, yielding ≈ 10-3 - 10-1s-1 for vacuum quenching, ≈ 10-5 - 10-3s-1 for static gas quenching, ≈ 10-2 - 100s-1 for dynamic gas quenching and ≈ 102s-1 for antisolvent quenching. This benchmark fosters transferability and scalability of hybrid perovskite fabrication, transforming the "art of device making" to well-defined process engineering.

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