The first demonstration of entirely roll-toroll fabricated perovskite solar cell modules under ambient room conditions.

Autor: Weerasinghe, Hasitha C., Macadam, Nasiruddin, Jueng-Eun Kim, Sutherland, Luke J., Angmo, Dechan, Ng, Leonard W. T., Scully, Andrew D., Glenn, Fiona, Chantler, Regine, Chang, Nathan L., Dehghanimadvar, Mohammad, Lei Shi, Ho-Baillie, Anita W. Y., Egan, Renate, Chesman, Anthony S. R., Mei Gao, Jasieniak, Jacek J., Hasan, Tawfique, Vak, Doojin
Zdroj: Nature Communications; 3/12/2024, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
Abstrakt: The rapid development of organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite solar cells has resulted in laboratory-scale devices having power conversion efficiencies that are competitive with commercialised technologies. However, hybrid perovskite solar cells are yet to make an impact beyond the research community, with translation to large-area devices fabricated by industry-relevant manufacturing methods remaining a critical challenge. Here we report the first demonstration of hybrid perovskite solar cell modules, comprising seriallyinterconnected cells, produced entirely using industrial roll-to-roll printing tools under ambient room conditions. As part of this development, costly vacuum-deposited metal electrodes are replaced with printed carbon electrodes. A high-throughput experiment involving the analysis of batches of 1600 cells produced using 20 parameter combinations enabled rapid optimisation over a large parameter space. The optimised roll-to-roll fabricated hybrid perovskite solar cells show power conversion efficiencies of up to 15.5% for individual small-area cells and 11.0% for serially-interconnected cells in large-area modules. Based on the devices produced in this work, a cost of ~0.7 USD W−1 is predicted for a production rate of 1,000,000 m2 per year in Australia, with potential for further significant cost reductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index