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91探花
CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

David McMeekin

Royal Society URF

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Snaith group
david.mcmeekin@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82327
Robert Hooke Building, room G24
  • About
  • Publications

Research update: Strategies for improving the stability of perovskite solar cells

APL Materials AIP Publishing 4:9 (2016) 091503

Authors:

Severin Habisreutinger, David P McMeekin, Henry J Snaith, Robin J Nicholas

Abstract:

The power-conversion efficiency of perovskite solar cells has soared up to 22.1% earlier this year. Within merely five years, the perovskite solar cell can now compete on efficiency with inorganic thin-film technologies, making it the most promising of the new, emerging photovoltaic solar cell technologies. The next grand challenge is now the aspect of stability. The hydrophilicity and volatility of the organic methylammonium makes the work-horse material methylammonium lead iodide vulnerable to degradation through humidity and heat. Additionally, ultraviolet radiation and oxygen constitute stressors which can deteriorate the device performance. There are two fundamental strategies to increasing the device stability: developing protective layers around the vulnerable perovskite absorber and developing a more resilient perovskite absorber. The most important reports in literature are summarized and analyzed here, letting us conclude that any long-term stability, on par with that of inorganic thin-film technologies, is only possible with a more resilient perovskite incorporated in a highly protective device design.

Shunt鈥恇locking layers for semitransparent perovskite solar cells

Advanced Materials Interfaces Wiley 3:10 (2016) 1500837

Authors:

MT H枚rantner, Pabitra Nayak, S Mukhopadhyay, K Wojciechowski, C Beck, D McMeekin, B Kamino, GE Eperon, Henry Snaith

Abstract:

Perovskite solar cells have shown phenomenal progress and have great potential to be manufactured as low鈥恈ost large area modules. However, perovskite films often suffer from pinholes and the resulting contact between hole鈥 and electron transporting layers provides lower resistance (shunt) pathways, leading to decreased open鈥恈ircuit voltage and fill factor. This problem is even more severe in large area cells and especially in the case of neutral color semitransparent cells, where a large absorber鈥恌ree area is required to provide the desired transparency. Herein, a simple, inexpensive, and scalable wet chemical method is presented to block these 鈥渟hunting paths鈥 via deposition of transparent, insulating molecular layers, which preferentially bind to the uncovered surface of the electron collecting oxide, without hindering charge extraction from the perovskite to the charge collection layers. It is shown that this method improves the performance in semitransparent cells, where the enhancement in open鈥恈ircuit voltage is up to 30% without negatively impacting the photocurrent. Using this method, we achieved an efficiency of 6.1% for a neutral color semitransparent perovskite cell with 38% average visible transmittance. This simple shunt blocking technique has applications in improving the yield as well as efficiency of large area perovskite solar cells and light emitting devices.

A mixed-cation lead mixed-halide perovskite absorber for tandem solar cells

Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 351:6269 (2015) 151-155

Authors:

Amir A Haghighirad, David P McMeekin, Golnaz Sadoughi, Waqaas Rehman, Giles E Eperon, Michael Saliba, Maximilian T Horanter, Nobuya Sakai, Lars Korte, Bernd Rech, Michael B Johnston, Laura M Herz, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

Metal halide perovskite photovoltaic cells could potentially boost the efficiency of commercial silicon photovoltaic modules from 鈭20 toward 30% when used in tandem architectures. An optimum perovskite cell optical band gap of ~1.75 electron volts (eV) can be achieved by varying halide composition, but to date, such materials have had poor photostability and thermal stability. Here we present a highly crystalline and compositionally photostable material, [HC(NH2)2](0.83)Cs(0.17)Pb(I(0.6)Br(0.4))3, with an optical band gap of ~1.74 eV, and we fabricated perovskite cells that reached open-circuit voltages of 1.2 volts and power conversion efficiency of over 17% on small areas and 14.7% on 0.715 cm(2) cells. By combining these perovskite cells with a 19%-efficient silicon cell, we demonstrated the feasibility of achieving >25%-efficient four-terminal tandem cells.

Charge selective contacts, mobile ions and anomalous hysteresis in organic-inorganic perovskite solar cells

Materials Horizons Royal Society of Chemistry 2:3 (2015) 315-322

Authors:

Ye Zhang, Mingzhen Liu, Giles Eperon, Tomas C Leijtens, David McMeekin, Michael Saliba, Wei Zhang, Michele de Bastiani, Annamaria Petrozza, Laura Herz, Michael Johnston, Hong Lin, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

High-efficiency perovskite solar cells typically employ an organic鈥搃norganic metal halide perovskite material as light absorber and charge transporter, sandwiched between a p-type electron-blocking organic hole-transporting layer and an n-type hole-blocking electron collection titania compact layer. Some device configurations also include a thin mesoporous layer of TiO2 or Al2O3 which is infiltrated and capped with the perovskite absorber. Herein, we demonstrate that it is possible to fabricate planar and mesoporous perovskite solar cells devoid of an electron selective hole-blocking titania compact layer, which momentarily exhibit power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) of over 13%. This performance is however not sustained and is related to the previously observed anomalous hysteresis in perovskite solar cells. The 鈥渃ompact layer-free鈥 meso-superstructured perovskite devices yield a stabilised PCE of only 2.7% while the compact layer-free planar heterojunction devices display no measurable steady state power output when devoid of an electron selective contact. In contrast, devices including the titania compact layer exhibit stabilised efficiency close to that derived from the current voltage measurements. We propose that under forward bias the perovskite diode becomes polarised, providing a beneficial field, allowing accumulation of positive and negative space charge near the contacts, which enables more efficient charge extraction. This provides the required built-in potential and selective charge extraction at each contact to temporarily enable efficient operation of the perovskite solar cells even in the absence of charge selective n- and p-type contact layers. The polarisation of the material is consistent with long range migration and accumulation of ionic species within the perovskite to the regions near the contacts. When the external field is reduced under working conditions, the ions can slowly diffuse away from the contacts redistributing throughout the film, reducing the field asymmetry and the effectiveness of the operation of the solar cells. We note that in light of recent publications showing high efficiency in devices devoid of charge selective contacts, this work reaffirms the absolute necessity to measure and report the stabilised power output under load when characterizing perovskite solar cells.

Efficiency Measurements and Simulations of GaInP/InGaAs/Ge Quantum Dot Enhanced Solar Cells at up to 1000鈥怱uns Under Flash and Continuous Concentration

AIP Conference Proceedings AIP Publishing 1407:1 (2011) 220-223

Authors:

Jeffrey F Wheeldon, Alex Walker, Christopher E Valdivia, Simon Chow, Olivier Theriault, Richard Beal, M Yandt, Denis Masson, Bruno Riel, David McMeekin, Norbert Puetz, Steven G Wallace, Vincent Aimez, Richard Are虁s, Trevor J Hall, Simon Fafard, Karin Hinzer, Frank Dimroth, Sarah Kurtz, Gabriel Sala, Andreas W Bett

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