Author
Listed:
- Yunxiu Shen
(Soochow University)
- Tiankai Zhang
(Linköping University)
- Guiying Xu
(Soochow University)
- Julian A. Steele
(The University of Queensland)
- Xiankai Chen
(Soochow University)
- Weijie Chen
(Soochow University)
- Guanhaojie Zheng
(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Jiajia Li
(Soochow University)
- Boyu Guo
(North Carolina State University)
- Heyi Yang
(Soochow University)
- Yeyong Wu
(Soochow University)
- Xia Lin
(Soochow University)
- Thamraa Alshahrani
(Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University)
- Wanjian Yin
(Soochow University)
- Jian Zhu
(Soochow University)
- Feng Wang
(Linköping University)
- Aram Amassian
(North Carolina State University)
- Xingyu Gao
(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
- Xiaohong Zhang
(Soochow University
Soochow University)
- Feng Gao
(Linköping University)
- Yaowen Li
(Soochow University
Soochow University
Soochow University)
- Yongfang Li
(Soochow University
Soochow University
Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Abstract
Perovskite solar cells (pero-SCs) have undergone rapid development in the past decade. However, there is still a lack of systematic studies investigating whether the empirical rules of working lifetime assessment used for silicon solar cells can be applied to pero-SCs. It is believed that pero-SCs show enhanced stability under day/night cycling owing to the reported self-healing effect in the dark1,2. Here we find that the degradation of highly efficient FAPbI3 pero-SCs is much faster under a natural day/night cycling mode, bringing into question the widely accepted approach to estimate the operational lifetime of pero-SCs based on continuous-mode testing. We reveal the key factor to be the lattice strain caused by thermal expansion and shrinking of the perovskite during operation, an effect that gradually relaxes under the continuous-illumination mode but cycles synchronously under the cycling mode3,4. The periodic lattice strain under the cycling mode results in deep trap accumulation and chemical degradation during operation, decreasing the ion-migration potential and hence the device lifetime5. We introduce phenylselenenyl chloride to regulate the perovskite lattice strain during day/night cycling, achieving a certified efficiency of 26.3 per cent and a 10-fold improvement in the time required to reach 80% of peak efficiency (T80) under the cycling mode after the modification.
Suggested Citation
Yunxiu Shen & Tiankai Zhang & Guiying Xu & Julian A. Steele & Xiankai Chen & Weijie Chen & Guanhaojie Zheng & Jiajia Li & Boyu Guo & Heyi Yang & Yeyong Wu & Xia Lin & Thamraa Alshahrani & Wanjian Yin , 2024.
"Strain regulation retards natural operation decay of perovskite solar cells,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 635(8040), pages 882-889, November.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:635:y:2024:i:8040:d:10.1038_s41586-024-08161-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08161-x
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