Record efficiency - tandem solar cells made from perovskite and organic material
“This was only possible by combining two major breakthroughs”
C. Thee Vanichangkul
Combining two materials that selectively absorb short and long wavelengths, e.g., blue/green and red/infrared parts of the spectrum, makes the best use of our sunlight and is a well-known strategy to increase efficiency in solar cells. Best red/infrared absorbing parts of solar cells so far were, however, made from traditional materials, such as silicon or CIGS (copper indium gallium selenide). Unfortunately, these require high processing temperatures, and thus exhibit a relatively high carbon footprint.
In their work, now published in “Nature”, Lang and colleagues combine two emerging solar cell technologies, namely perovskite and organic solar cells, that both are processed at low temperatures with a low carbon footprint. Achieving a record level of 25.7 % efficiency for this new combination, however, was not easy, says Felix Lang: “This was only possible by combining two major breakthroughs.” First, Meng and Li synthesized a novel red/infrared absorbing organic solar cell that extends its absorption even further into the infrared. “Still, tandem solar cells were limited by the perovskite layer, which shows strong efficiency losses if adjusted to absorb only blue/green parts of the sun spectrum”, he explains. “To tackle this, we utilized a novel passivation layer applied to the perovskite that reduces material defects and improves the performance of the whole cell.”
Original publication
Original publication
Xin Jiang, Shucheng Qin, Lei Meng, Guorui He, Jinyuan Zhang, Yiyang Wang, Yiqiao Zhu, Tianwei Zou, Yufei Gong, Zekun Chen, Guangpei Sun, Minchao Liu, Xiaojun Li, Felix Lang, Yongfang Li; "Isomeric diammonium passivation for perovskite–organic tandem solar cells"; Nature, Volume 635, 2024-10-14
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