4.3 Article

Evaluation of hypervelocity impact of micrometeoroids and orbital debris on next-generation space solar cells

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 62, Issue SK, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.35848/1347-4065/acd18b

Keywords

solar cell; micrometeoroid; orbital debris; hypervelocity impact; IMM3J; perovskite; space

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This paper discusses the impact of hypervelocity micrometeoroids and orbital debris (MMODs) on inverted metamorphic triple-junction (IMM3J) and perovskite solar cells. It was experimentally found that IMM3J solar cells can suffer from short-circuit faults due to MMOD impacts, unlike conventional 3J cells. Projectile diameters and velocities that could cause these faults were determined using a model proposed by Burt. Perovskite solar cells did not exhibit short-circuit faults but experienced open-circuit faults several days after the hypervelocity impact experiment, possibly due to moisture-induced decomposition of the perovskite crystal.
This paper discusses the hypervelocity impacts of micrometeoroids and orbital debris (MMODs) on inverted metamorphic triple-junction (IMM3J) and perovskite solar cells, which are much thinner than conventional triple-junction (3J) solar cells. We experimentally found that IMM3J solar cells can suffer from short-circuit faults due to the hypervelocity impacts of MMODs, unlike conventional 3J cells, and determined the projectile diameters and velocities that could cause them using a model proposed by Burt. No short-circuit mode was identified in perovskite solar cells, but they had open-circuit faults several days after the hypervelocity impact experiment, which are possibly attributed to the decomposition of the perovskite crystal by moisture in the air due to the broken seal.

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