Efficient tandem solar cells with solution-processed perovskite on textured crystalline silicon.
Yi HouErkan AydinMichele De BastianiChuanxiao XiaoFurkan H IsikgorDing-Jiang XueBin ChenHao ChenBehzad BahramiAshraful H ChowdhuryAndrew JohnstonSe-Woong BaekZiru HuangMingyang WeiYitong DongJoel TroughtonRawan JalmoodAlessandro J MirabelliThomas G AllenEmmanuel Van KerschaverMakhsud I SaidaminovDerya BaranQiquan Quinn QiaoKai ZhuStefaan De WolfEdward H SargentPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Stacking solar cells with decreasing band gaps to form tandems presents the possibility of overcoming the single-junction Shockley-Queisser limit in photovoltaics. The rapid development of solution-processed perovskites has brought perovskite single-junction efficiencies >20%. However, this process has yet to enable monolithic integration with industry-relevant textured crystalline silicon solar cells. We report tandems that combine solution-processed micrometer-thick perovskite top cells with fully textured silicon heterojunction bottom cells. To overcome the charge-collection challenges in micrometer-thick perovskites, we enhanced threefold the depletion width at the bases of silicon pyramids. Moreover, by anchoring a self-limiting passivant (1-butanethiol) on the perovskite surfaces, we enhanced the diffusion length and further suppressed phase segregation. These combined enhancements enabled an independently certified power conversion efficiency of 25.7% for perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells. These devices exhibited negligible performance loss after a 400-hour thermal stability test at 85°C and also after 400 hours under maximum power point tracking at 40°C.