World record for tandem perovskite-CIGS solar cell

The Pero-CIGS tandem cell achieves a record efficiency of 23.26 percent.

The Pero-CIGS tandem cell achieves a record efficiency of 23.26 percent. © HZB

The electron microscopy image shows an AZO layer (reddish colored) between the perovskite and the CIGS semiconductor. On top of AZO is the self assembled monomolecular layer (SAM).

The electron microscopy image shows an AZO layer (reddish colored) between the perovskite and the CIGS semiconductor. On top of AZO is the self assembled monomolecular layer (SAM). © HZB

Most of the work was done in the Helmholtz Innovation Lab HySPRINT at HZB.

Most of the work was done in the Helmholtz Innovation Lab HySPRINT at HZB. © Swantje Furtak

A team headed by Prof. Steve Albrecht from the HZB will present a new world-record tandem solar cell at EU PVSEC, the world's largest international photovoltaic and solar energy conference and exhibition, in Marseille, France on September 11, 2019. This tandem solar cell combines the semiconducting materials perovskite and CIGS and achieves a certified efficiency of 23.26 per cent. One reason for this success lies in the cell’s intermediate layer of organic molecules: they self-organise to cover even rough semiconductor surfaces. Two patents have been filed for these layers.

Perovskite-based solar cells have experienced an incredibly rapid increase in efficiency over the last ten years. The combination of perovskites with classical semiconductor materials such as silicon and copper-indium-gallium-selenide (CIGS) compounds in tandem solar cells promises low-cost, high-performance solar modules for the future. However, losses at the electrodes between the two semiconductors considerably reduce the efficiency.

Record efficiency: 23,26 per cent

HZB physicist Prof. Steve Albrecht and his team now successfully established novel electrode coatings that greatly reduce these losses. They could produce a monolithic tandem solar cell from perovskite and CIGS that achieved an officially certified  efficiency of 23.26 per cent, which currently is a world record value.  The tandem cell has an active area of one square centimetre and thus reaches another milestone, as perovskite CIGS tandem cells have so far been significantly smaller.

Self assembled monolayer

The contact layers consist of carbazole-based organic molecules coupled to phosphonic acid groups. These molecules arrange themselves into what are known as self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). These SAMs have highly favourable electro-optical properties and the self-assembly even leads to complete coverage of rough semiconductor surfaces.

Two patents filed

“The SAMs are strikingly simple and robust. This also allows them to be scaled up to industrial levels. In addition, they are compatible to a wide variety of substrates and their material consumption is extremely low”, explains Amran Al-Ashouri, PhD student in the Albrecht group and first author of the study. This work might further accelerate progress towards extremely inexpensive perovskite-based PV technologies. The group has now filed two patents and is currently in licensing negotiations.

Prof. Steve Albrecht heads the Perovskite Tandem Solar Cells Junior Research Group funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). Work on the perovskite solar cells took place primarily in the Helmholtz HySPRINT Innovation Lab, while the SAMs were developed in close collaboration with Kaunas University of Technology (Lithuania), where the group of Prof. Vytautas Getautis synthesized the molecules. The CIGS layers are provided by the group of Dr. Christian Kaufmann, who heads the high efficiency CIGS activities at HZB and is supported by the SpeedCIGS project funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi).

Presentation on Wednesday, at EU PVSEC

Albrecht will present this work next Wednesday, September 11th, in Marseille at a plenary lecture of EU PVSEC, the world’s largest international photovoltaic and solar energy conference and exhibition.

Title of the talk: “Towards Highly Efficient Monolithic Tandem Devices with Perovskite Top Cells” S. Albrecht, A. Al-Ashouri, E. Köhnen, M. Jost, A. Morales, T. Bertram, L. Korte, B. Stannowski, C. Kaufmann, R. Schlatmann

Location: EU PVSEC, Marseille, France 9-13 September 2019

Date: Wednesday, September 11, 2019 PLENARY SESSION 3CP.1 from 10:30 - 12:00 Perovskite, Organic, CIGS and III-V Multi-Junction Devices

 

arö


You might also be interested in

  • Best Innovator Award 2023 for Artem Musiienko
    News
    22.03.2024
    Best Innovator Award 2023 for Artem Musiienko
    Dr. Artem Musiienko has been awarded a special prize for his groundbreaking new method for characterising semiconductors. At the recent annual conference of the Marie Curie Alumni Association (MCAA) in Milan, Italy, he received the MCAA Award for the best innovation. Since 2023, Musiienko has been carrying out his research project with a postdoctoral fellowship from the Marie Sklodowska Curie Actions in Antonio Abate's department, Novel Materials and Interfaces for Photovoltaic Solar Cells (SE-AMIP).
  • Where quantum computers can score
    Science Highlight
    15.03.2024
    Where quantum computers can score
    The travelling salesman problem is considered a prime example of a combinatorial optimisation problem. Now a Berlin team led by theoretical physicist Prof. Dr. Jens Eisert of Freie Universität Berlin and HZB has shown that a certain class of such problems can actually be solved better and much faster with quantum computers than with conventional methods.
  • The future of BESSY
    News
    07.03.2024
    The future of BESSY
    At the end of February 2024, a team at HZB published an article in Synchrotron Radiation News (SRN). They describe the next development goals for the light source as well as the BESSY II+ upgrade programme and the successor source BESSY III.