4.7 Article

IPL-Annealed Mixed-Cation Perovskites with Robust Coating Window toward Scalable Manufacturing of Commercial Perovskite Solar Cells

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 5207-5216

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.3c00134

Keywords

mixed-cation perovskite solar cells; scalable manufacturing; intense pulsed light annealing; flexible perovskite solar cells; solvent engineering

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In this study, a mixed-cation perovskite ink with a robust coating window was developed using a classical roll-to-roll manufacturing method and intense pulsed light annealing. The method resulted in blade-coated, flexible, mixed-cation perovskite solar cells with a champion power conversion efficiency of 16.7%, and it is one of the fastest processing methods for the perovskite layer. The overall reduction in processing time with a stable ink represents an advance toward the scaled production of perovskite solar cells on flexible substrates.
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) are a promising alternative solar technology, but the technical challenges of (1) stability/durability, (2) efficiency at scale, and (3) manufacturability must be overcome to achieve widespread PSC commercialization. The challenge of balancing solution ink formulation and scalable manufacturing is often overlooked in the literature, where focus is on adopting inks from processes that will not scale. In this study, we apply a classical roll-to-roll manufacturing perspective, utilizing both compositional engineering and intense pulsed light (IPL) annealing, to develop a mixed-cation perovskite ink with a robust coating window that simultaneously solve issues of stability and manufacturability for PSCs. Our method resulted in blade-coated, flexible, mixed-cation PSCs on ITO-PET substrates with a champion power conversion efficiency (PCE) efficiency of 16.7% using IPL annealing of the absorber layer and, to our knowledge, is one of the fastest processing methods for the perovskite layer. This overall reduction in processing time with a stable ink represents an advance toward the scaled production of perovskite solar cells on flexible substrates.

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