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Bio-inspired vertebral design for scalable and flexible perovskite solar cells.

Authors :
Meng, Xiangchuan
Cai, Zheren
Zhang, Yanyan
Hu, Xiaotian
Xing, Zhi
Huang, Zengqi
Huang, Zhandong
Cui, Yongjie
Hu, Ting
Su, Meng
Liao, Xunfan
Zhang, Lin
Wang, Fuyi
Song, Yanlin
Chen, Yiwang
Source :
Nature Communications; 6/15/2020, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The translation of unparalleled efficiency from the lab-scale devices to practical-scale flexible modules affords a huge performance loss for flexible perovskite solar cells (PSCs). The degradation is attributed to the brittleness and discrepancy of perovskite crystal growth upon different substrates. Inspired by robust crystallization and flexible structure of vertebrae, herein, we employ a conductive and glued polymer between indium tin oxide and perovskite layers, which simultaneously facilitates oriented crystallization of perovskite and sticks the devices. With the results of experimental characterizations and theoretical simulations, this bionic interface layer accurately controls the crystallization and acts as an adhesive. The flexible PSCs achieve the power conversion efficiencies of 19.87% and 17.55% at effective areas of 1.01 cm<superscript>2</superscript> and 31.20 cm<superscript>2</superscript> respectively, retaining over 85% of original efficiency after 7000 narrow bending cycles with negligible angular dependence. Finally, the modules are assembled into a wearable solar-power source, enabling the upscaling of flexible electronics. Flexible perovskite solar cells suffer huge efficiency loss upon area scale-up due to brittleness of ITO and poor perovskite film quality. Here Meng et al. solve this by inserting a conductive and glued polymer layer between ITO and perovskite layers and obtain efficiency of 17% for 30 cm<superscript>2</superscript> devices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143783546
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16831-3