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All‐Printed Roll‐to‐Roll Perovskite Photovoltaics Enabled by Solution‐Processed Carbon Electrode
Advanced Materials, Volume: 35, Issue: 16, Start page: 2208561
Swansea University Authors: David Beynon , Ershad Parvazian, Katherine Elizabeth Anne Hooper , James McGettrick , Rahul Patidar, Tom Dunlop , Zhengfei Wei, Peter Davies, Rodrigo Garcia Rodriguez, Matt Carnie , Matthew Davies , Trystan Watson , Katherine Hooper, Pete Davies
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DOI (Published version): 10.1002/adma.202208561
Abstract
Perovskite photovoltaics have shown great promise in device efficiency but also the promise of scalability through solution-processed manufacture. Efforts to scale perovskites have been taken through printable mesoporous scaffolds and slot die coating of flexible substrates roll-to-roll (R2R). Howev...
Published in: | Advanced Materials |
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ISSN: | 0935-9648 1521-4095 |
Published: |
Wiley
2023
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Online Access: |
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62299 |
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Abstract: |
Perovskite photovoltaics have shown great promise in device efficiency but also the promise of scalability through solution-processed manufacture. Efforts to scale perovskites have been taken through printable mesoporous scaffolds and slot die coating of flexible substrates roll-to-roll (R2R). However, to date there has been no demonstration of entirely R2R-coated devices due to the lack of a compatible solution-processable back electrode; instead, high-value evaporated metal contacts are employed as a post process. Here, in this study, the combination of a low-temperature device structure and R2R-compatible solution formulations is employed to make a fully R2R printable device architecture overcoming interlayer incompatibilities and recombination losses. Therefore, the n–i–p device structure of SnO2/perovskite/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)/carbon is employed to form an ohmic contact between a p-type semiconductor and printable carbon electrode. In particular, the results show that the small-scale device efficiencies of 13–14% are achieved, matching the device performance of evaporated gold electrodes. Also, this entirely R2R-coated perovskite prototype represents a game changer, reaching over 10% (10.8) stabilized power conversion efficiency with unencapsulated long-term stability retaining 84% of its original efficiency over 1000 h under 70% RH and 25 °C. |
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Keywords: |
Carbon electrodes, perovskite, roll-to-roll, scale-up, slot die |
College: |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
Funders: |
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (GrantNumber(s): EP/N020863/1; EP/T028513/1; EP/M028267/1); Innovate UK (GrantNumber(s): 920036), European Regional Development Fund (GrantNumber(s): c80892), Llywodraeth Cymru, Swansea University. |
Issue: |
16 |
Start Page: |
2208561 |