Maximum efficiency, minimum materials and complexity

The a-Si:H is deposited on a AZO-film that acts as a transparent front contact. A ITO-layer serves as rear contact. The organic sub-cell possesses a front contact made of a conductive polymer material (PEDOT) and a metallic rear contact.

The a-Si:H is deposited on a AZO-film that acts as a transparent front contact. A ITO-layer serves as rear contact. The organic sub-cell possesses a front contact made of a conductive polymer material (PEDOT) and a metallic rear contact. © Uni Potsdam

Silicon-based thin-film solar cell with a supplementary organic layer can utilise infrared light as well

The cell consists of many active layers, which taken together are less than one micron thick. The new hybrid solar cell is constructed of two extremely thin layers of amorphous silicon as well as an organic layer. Despite the low volume of materials employed, the hybrid cell attains recording-breaking efficiency of 11.7%.
The organic layer is made of fullerenes, also known as “soccer ball molecules”, mixed with semiconducting polymers. It is able to convert infrared light that cannot be utilised by the silicon layers into electrical energy.

The complementary compound of organic and inorganic materials in a stacked cell offers a promising option for future solar cells. The cell was jointly developed through the BMBF “Leading-edge Research and Innovation in the New German Länder” programme by teams at the University of Potsdam and HZB who have published their work in the renowned technical journal Advanced Materials.

The fundamental component of the cell is a very thin layer of amorphous silicon interspersed with hydrogen (hydrogenated amorphous silicon / a-Si:H). These kinds of simple thin-film solar cells do not attain high efficiencies, as they can only use photons in the blue and green regions of the spectrum.

Steffen Roland, a doctoral student in Prof. Dieter Neher’s group at the University of Potsdam, and Sebastian Neubert, a doctoral student under Prof. Rutger Schlatmann in PVcomB at HZB, added first another a-Si:H layer to a tandem cell and then deposited an additional organic layer that enables infrared light as well to be converted into electrical energy. In this manner, they were able to increase the efficiency of the triple-junction cell to over 11%. At the same time, the structure of this solar cell is able to withstand the effects of aging better. This success impressively demonstrates how the close cooperation of doctoral students from different fields of study (organic semiconductors and inorganic semiconductors) leads to new device structures with improved properties.

“The cell can be fabricated easily with established thin-film technology common in the industry, and is also suited to production in large sheets”, explains Schlatmann. Neher adds: “The high absorption coefficients of a-SI:H layers and the properties of the organic layer make possible an active stack no thicker than one micron - that is maximum efficiency with minimum materials!”


Article first published online 7 January 2015 in Advanced Materials: Hybrid Organic/Inorganic Thin-Film Multijunction Solar Cells Exceeding 11% Power Conversion Efficiency
DOI: 10.1002/adma.201404698

arö


You might also be interested in

  • A new way to control the magnetic properties of rare earth elements
    Science Highlight
    17.07.2024
    A new way to control the magnetic properties of rare earth elements
    The special properties of rare earth magnetic materials are due to the electrons in the 4f shell. Until now, the magnetic properties of 4f electrons were considered almost impossible to control. Now, a team from HZB, Freie Universität Berlin and other institutions has shown for the first time that laser pulses can influence 4f electrons- and thus change their magnetic properties. The discovery, which was made through experiments at EuXFEL and FLASH, opens up a new way to data storage with rare earth elements.
  • BESSY II shows how solid-state batteries degrade
    Science Highlight
    09.07.2024
    BESSY II shows how solid-state batteries degrade
    Solid-state batteries have several advantages: they can store more energy and are safer than batteries with liquid electrolytes. However, they do not last as long and their capacity decreases with each charge cycle. But it doesn't have to stay that way: Researchers are already on the trail of the causes. In the journal ACS Energy Letters, a team from HZB and Justus-Liebig-Universität, Giessen, presents a new method for precisely monitoring electrochemical reactions during the operation of a solid-state battery using photoelectron spectroscopy at BESSY II. The results help to improve battery materials and design.
  • HySPRINT Photovoltaics Lab inaugurated
    News
    20.06.2024
    HySPRINT Photovoltaics Lab inaugurated
    After around four years of renovation, photovoltaics research groups moved into their offices in Kekuléstraße on 20 June 2024. With the reopening, the building has also been given a new name that makes the research more visible: it is now called HySPRINT Photovoltaics Lab.