Breakthrough In Perovskite Solar Cell Technology

A new technique has produced the highest performing inverted perovskite solar cell ever recorded.

A new technique has produced the highest performing inverted perovskite solar cell ever recorded.

Perovskite based cells are widely viewed as the next generation of solar cells, offering similar power conversion efficiency (PCE) performance, but at a much lower cost than the market dominant crystalline silicon based solar cells.

A team of researchers from Peking University and the Universities of Surrey, Oxford and Cambridge disovered a new way to reduce an unwanted process called non-radiative recombination, where energy and efficiency is lost in perovskite solar cells.

The team created a technique called Solution-Process Secondary growth (SSG) which increased the voltage of inverted perovskite solar cells by 100 millivolts, reaching a high of 1.21 volts without compromising the quality of the solar cell or the electrical current flowing through a device. They tested the technique on a device which recorded a PCE of 20.9 per cent, the highest certified PCE for inverted perovskite solar cells ever recorded.

"The need for clean and sustainable energy that helps us to stop damaging our planet is what drives us," said Dr. Wei Zhang from the University of Surrey's Advanced Technology Institute. "Our new technique confirms that there is a lot of promise with perovskite solar cells and we aim to explore this new and exciting area more in the future."

"It is pleasing to see this global project that could provide a solution to the need for a truly sustainable, cheap and clean energy resource," said Professor Ravi Silva, director of th Advanced Technology Institute at the University of Surrey. "This was a monumental effort from leading laboratories, researchers and institutions from across the world, all working together for the common good."

(Source: University of Surrey)

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