Experimental and computational DFT, drift-diffusion studies of cobalt-based hybrid perovskite crystals as absorbers in perovskite solar cells.
Sathish MarimuthuSaravanan PandiarajMuthumareeswaran MuthuramamoorthyKhalid E AlzahraniAbdullah N AlodhaybPitchaimuthu SudhagarAndrews Nirmala GracePublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
The optimised designs of dimethyl ammonium cobalt formate-based perovskite crystals [(CH 3 ) 2 NH 2 ]Co(HCOO) 3 were experimentally synthesized and computationally utilized as absorbers for perovskite solar cells (PSCs). Crystals were grown using solvothermal synthesis. Additive materials (Fe, Ni) are responsible for the growth and suppression of crystals in the micrometre range. Temperature and pressure were altered to obtain optimum growth conditions. Grown crystals were characterized by spectroscopy (XRD, FT-IR, UV-Vis) and optical microscopy. Combined density functional theory (DFT) and drift-diffusion modelling frameworks were simulated. These simulators were used to examine various perovskite absorbers for solar-cell configurations. Field calculations were used to examine the structural stability, band structure, and electronic contribution of the constituent elements in [(CH 3 ) 2 NH 2 ]Co 1- n M n (HCOO) 3 (M = Fe, Ni and n = 0, 0.1) as absorber material. Conventional TiO 2 and spiro-OMeTAD were used as the electron-transport layer and hole-transport layer, respectively, and Pt was used as a back contact. Comprehensive analysis of the effects of several parameters (layer thickness, series and shunt resistances, temperature, generation-recombination rates, current-voltage density, quantum efficiency) was carried out using simulation. Our proposed strategy may pave the way for further design of new absorber materials for PSCs.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- perovskite solar cells
- molecular dynamics
- ionic liquid
- metal organic framework
- high resolution
- optical coherence tomography
- single molecule
- high speed
- oxidative stress
- dna damage
- high throughput
- molecular docking
- reduced graphene oxide
- solar cells
- quantum dots
- dna repair
- stem cells
- visible light
- gold nanoparticles
- solid state