Towards linking lab and field lifetimes of perovskite solar cells

Metal halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) represent a promising low-cost thin-film photovoltaic technology, with unprecedented power conversion efficiencies obtained for both single-junction and tandem applications 1 – 8 . To push PSCs towards commercialization, it is critical, albeit challenging,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2023-11, Vol.623 (7986), p.313-318
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Qi, Tirawat, Robert, Kerner, Ross A., Gaulding, E. Ashley, Xian, Yeming, Wang, Xiaoming, Newkirk, Jimmy M., Yan, Yanfa, Berry, Joseph J., Zhu, Kai
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Metal halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) represent a promising low-cost thin-film photovoltaic technology, with unprecedented power conversion efficiencies obtained for both single-junction and tandem applications 1 – 8 . To push PSCs towards commercialization, it is critical, albeit challenging, to understand device reliability under real-world outdoor conditions where multiple stress factors (for example, light, heat and humidity) coexist, generating complicated degradation behaviours 9 – 13 . To quickly guide PSC development, it is necessary to identify accelerated indoor testing protocols that can correlate specific stressors with observed degradation modes in fielded devices. Here we use a state-of-the-art positive-intrinsic-negative (p–i–n) PSC stack (with power conversion efficiencies of up to approximately 25.5%) to show that indoor accelerated stability tests can predict our six-month outdoor ageing tests. Device degradation rates under illumination and at elevated temperatures are most instructive for understanding outdoor device reliability. We also find that the indium tin oxide/self-assembled monolayer-based hole transport layer/perovskite interface most strongly affects our device operation stability. Improving the ion-blocking properties of the self-assembled monolayer hole transport layer increases averaged device operational stability at 50 °C–85 °C by a factor of about 2.8, reaching over 1,000 h at 85 °C and to near 8,200 h at 50 °C, with a projected 20% degradation, which is among the best to date for high-efficiency p–i–n PSCs 14 – 17 . We correlate lab test and field test results to better predict the performance of perovskite photovoltaics as a step towards real-world implementation.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-023-06610-7