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Semi-transparent metal electrode-free all-inorganic perovskite solar cells using floating-catalyst-synthesized carbon nanotubesopen access

Authors
Yoon, SaemonLee, Il HyunHan, JiyeBahadur, JitendraLee, SeojunLee, SangsuKim, Dong SukMikladal, B.Kauppinen, Esko I.Kang, Dong-WonJeon, Il
Issue Date
Mar-2024
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
carbon electrode; carbon nanotube; floating catalyst; inorganic perovskite solar cell; metal-free electrode
Citation
ECOMAT, v.6, no.3
Journal Title
ECOMAT
Volume
6
Number
3
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/72993
DOI
10.1002/eom2.12440
ISSN
2567-3173
2567-3173
Abstract
Perovskite solar cells offer a promising future for next-generation photovoltaics owing to numerous advantages such as high efficiency and ease of processing. However, two significant challenges, air stability, and manufacturing costs, hamper their commercialization. This study proposes a solution to these issues by introducing a floating catalyst-based carbon nanotube (CNT) electrode into all-inorganic perovskite solar cells for the first time. The use of CNT eliminates the need for metal electrodes, which are primarily responsible for high fabrication costs and device instability. The nanohybrid film formed by combining hydrophobic CNT with polymeric hole-transporting materials acted as an efficient charge collector and provided moisture protection. Remarkably, the metal-electrode-free CNT-based all-inorganic perovskite solar cells demonstrated outstanding stability, maintaining their efficiency for over 4000 h without encapsulation in air. These cells achieved a retention efficiency of 13.8%, which is notable for all-inorganic perovskites, and they also exhibit high transparency in both the visible and infrared regions. The obtained efficiency was the highest for semi-transparent all-inorganic perovskite solar cells. Building on this, a four-terminal tandem device using a low-band perovskite solar cell achieved a power conversion efficiency of 21.1%. These CNT electrodes set new benchmarks for the potential of perovskite solar cells with groundbreaking device stability and tandem applicability, demonstrating a step toward industrial applications.image Floating catalyst-synthesized carbon nanotube electrode-based metal electrode-free all-inorganic perovskite devices demonstrate more than 4000 h of stable operation without encapsulation. The thick hydrophobic nanohybrid film of carbon nanotubes and polymers not only protects all-inorganic perovskites but also collects charge effectively, resulting in an efficiency of 13.8%, which increases to 21.1% when applied as a tandem device exploiting the semi-transparent characteristic. image
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Kang, Dong-Won
공과대학 (에너지시스템 공학부)
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