• Skip to Management
  • Skip to Main menu
  • Skip to Page content
CHIC Logo
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt
Search
  • de
  • en
  • CHIC Logo
  • News / Events
    • Overview
    • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Company Directory
  • Working Environments
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt

News / Events

  • Overview
  • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Charlottenburg
  • News / Events
01. February 2019

Thin-film tandem cells made of perovskite and CIGSe semiconductors

Ultra-thin and extremely efficient solar cell due to new material combination

CIGS Tandem scheme
An extremely thin layer between CIGSe and Perovskite improves the efficiency of the tandemcell. Copyright: HZB

An HZB team has fabricated and characterised a thin-film tandem solar cell made of perovskite and CIGSe. They relied on a simple, robust fabrication process that is also suitable for scaling up to large surface areas. The tandem solar cell is a fully thin film device with an impressive efficiency of 21.6%. With further improvements it might reach efficiencies above 30%.

Tandem solar cells consist of two semiconductors with different band gaps, enabling them to use a larger fraction of the solar spectrum for generating electricity. This concept is particularly successful when conventional absorber layers such as silicon or copper indium gallium selenide (CIGSe) are combined with the new metal-halide semiconductor perovskite. This is because perovskites convert the blue, high-energy portions of sunlight into electrical energy very efficiently, while silicon or CIGSe convert the red and near-infrared portions effectively.

CIGSe and perovskite thin films combined

HZB researchers have now combined a thin-film solar cell made of CIGSe with a thin layer of perovskite. The CIGSe thin film was grown on a substrate, resulting in a CIGSe surface that is typically rough and irregular. This has made the application of the perovskite top cell using wet-chemical methods more difficult thus far.

Ultrathin layer improves cell efficiency

The HZB team in cooperation with Eindhoven University of Technology has now for the first time improved the properties of the tandem solar cell by applying an ultra-thin yet conformal intermediate layer to the CIGSe layer, then spin-coating the perovskite layer onto it at the HySPRINT lab of HZB. The tandem solar cell produced in this way converts 21.6% of the solar spectrum into electrical energy. This power conversion efficiency remains stable.

Manufacture requires minimal energy

Although tandem cells made of silicon and perovskite achieve even higher efficiencies so far, theoretically, CIGSe perovskite tandem cells could also achieve these efficiencies. In addition, the new CIGSe perovskite tandem cell is a fully thin film device. This means that the new tandem cell is made from thin layers of CIGSe and perovskite so that the material and energy consumed during its manufacture are extremely low.

Mass production feasible

“This tandem cell was fabricated on a rough, untreated CIGS bottom cell, which simplifies manufacture and represents an enormous advantage in terms of mass production“, Prof. Dr. Rutger Schlatmann, Director of the HZB Institute PVcomB, points out.

The tandem solar cell was realised on an area of 0.8 square centimetres, which is considerably larger than the square-millimetre areas commonly used in laboratory research.

“Record values are only recognised for areas of one square centimetre or more, yet our cell area is just slightly below this threshold. Therefore, we now focus to certify this tandem solar cell efficiency and its enormous performance by an independent institution“, says Prof. Dr. Steve Albrecht, head of a Young Investigator Group at HZB, funded by the Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF).

Outlook: Possible efficiencies of more than 30%

Using electron microscopy and other measurements, first author Dr. Marko Jost, a postdoc in Steve Albrecht's team, and his colleagues analysed the conformal layer structure of the tandem cell and were also able to determine the contributions of the individual sub-cells to the performance of the tandem cell. Their study points out ways to further improve monolithic perovskite/CIGSe tandem cells and achieve efficiencies of over 30%.

 

Publication:

21.6%-efficient Monolithic Perovskite/Cu(In,Ga)Se2 Tandem Solar Cells with Thin Conformal Hole Transport Layers for Integration on Rough Bottom Cell Surfaces
Marko Jost, Tobias Bertram, Dibyashree Koushik, Jose Marquez, Marcel Verheijen, Marc Daniel Heinemann, Eike Köhnen, Amran Al-Ashouri, Steffen Braunger, Felix Lang, Bernd Rech, Thomas Unold, Mariadriana Creatore, Iver Lauermann, Christian A. Kaufmann, Rutger Schlatmann, and Steve Albrecht
Published in ACS Energy Lett. (2019)

DOI: 10.1021/acsenergylett.9b00135

 

Contact:

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie (HZB)
Young Investigator Group Perowskite Tandem Solar Cells

Dr. Marko Jost
Tel.: (030) 8062-41375
Email: marko.jost(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Prof. Dr. Steve Albrecht
Tel.: (030) 8062-41334
Email: steve.albrecht(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Prof. Dr. Rutger Schlatmann
Institute Competence Centre Photovoltaics Berlin (PVcomB)
Tel.: (030) 8062-15680
Email: rutger.schlatmann(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Press Officer:
Dr. Antonia Rötger
Tel.: (030) 8062-43733
Email: antonia.roetger(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Renewable Energies Microsystems / Materials Research

Related News

  • © Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

    HZB scientists participate in consensus statement for perovskite test methods

    Collection of aging measurement protocols published in Nature Energy
  • © Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

    HZB scientist provides new insights into perovskite solar cell research

    Plants absorb lead from perovskite solar cells more than expected
  • Picture: © M. Setzpfandt/ HZB

    Helmholtz Association promotes cooperation between HZB and Slovenia

    The research focus is on the characterization of tandem solar cells made of perovskite and silicon.
  • Steve Albrecht © HZB

    Steve Albrecht wins the 2019 Karl Scheel Prize

    The Physikalische Gesellschaft zu Berlin honours the researcher of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin for his work in the field of highly efficient tandem solar cell absorbers made of metal-halide perovskites
  • Silizium-Perowskit-Tandemsolarzelle. Bild: HZB

    New records in perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells

    An HZB team has been able to increase the efficiency achieving 25.5 %, which is the highest published value to date
  • Patented nanostructure for solar cells

    Rough optics, smooth surface
  • Picture: © Uni Potsdam

    Insight into loss processes in perovskite solar cells enables efficiency improvements

    In perovskite solar cells, charge carriers are mainly lost through recombination occurring at interface defect sites.
  • tandem solar cell. Credit: HZB

    Perovskite-silicon solar cell research collaboration hits 25.2% efficiency

    HZB scientists presented tandem solar cells at an international conference
  • Perovskite materials. Credit: HZB

    Trends and pathways to high-efficiency perovskite solar cells

    Scientists from Helmholtz-Zentrum provide an overview of the advancement of the class of materials in renowned scientific journal
  • Nanostructures trap the light, shows this illustration on the cover in  Advanced Optical Materials. Credit: Adv. Opt. Mat. 5/2017

    How to increase efficiencies of ultrathin CIGSe solar cells

    Nanoparticles at the back help harvesting the light
  • LinkedInshare0
  • Facebookshare0
  • WhatsAppshare0
  • E-Mail
  • © WISTA Management GmbH
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Social Media
  • Contact
Zukunftsort Charlottenburg Logo