Suppressed phase segregation for triple-junction perovskite solar cells.
Zaiwei WangLewei ZengTong ZhuHao ChenBin ChenDominik Józef KubickiAdam BalvanzChongwen LiAidan MaxwellEsma UgurRoberto Dos ReisMatthew ChengGuang YangBiwas SubediDeying LuoJuntao HuJunke WangSam TealeSuhas MaheshSasa WangShuangyan HuEuidae JungMingyang WeiSo Min ParkLuke GraterErkan AydinZhaoning SongNikolas J PodrazaZheng Hong LuJinsong HuangVinayak P DravidStefaan De WolfYanfa YanMichael GrätzelMercouri G KanatzidisEdward H SargentPublished in: Nature (2023)
The tunable band gaps and facile fabrication of perovskites make them attractive for multi-junction photovoltaics 1,2 . However, light-induced phase segregation limits their efficiency and stability 3-5 : this occurs in wide band gap (> 1.65 eV) I/Br mixed perovskite absorbers, and becomes even more acute in the top cells of triple-junction solar photovoltaics that requires a fully 2.0 eV band gap absorber 2,6 . We report herein that lattice distortion in I/Br mixed perovskites is correlated with the suppression of phase segregation, generating an increased ion migration energy barrier arising from the decreased average interatomic distance between A-site cation and iodide. Using a ~2.0 eV Rb/Cs mixed-cation inorganic perovskite with large lattice distortion in the top subcell, we fabricated all-perovskite triple-junction solar cells and achieved an efficiency of 24.3% (23.3% certified quasi-steady-state efficiency) with an open-circuit voltage of 3.21 V. This is, to our knowledge, the first reported certified efficiency for perovskite-based triple-junction solar cells. The triple-junction devices retain 80% of their initial efficiency following 420 hours of operation at the maximum power point.