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High throughput fabrication of mesoporous carbon perovskite solar cells
Author(s) -
Jenny Baker,
Katherine Hooper,
Simone Meroni,
Adam Pockett,
James McGettrick,
Zhengfei Wei,
Renán Escalante,
Gerko Oskam,
Matthew J. Carnie,
Trystan Watson
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of materials chemistry a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.637
H-Index - 212
eISSN - 2050-7488
pISSN - 2050-7496
DOI - 10.1039/c7ta05674e
Subject(s) - fabrication , perovskite (structure) , sintering , throughput , mesoporous material , materials science , carbon fibers , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , optoelectronics , computer science , chemistry , composite material , catalysis , telecommunications , engineering , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , composite number , wireless , biochemistry
The screen printed mesoporous carbon perovskite solar cell has great potential for commercialisation due to its scalable deposition processes and use of inexpensive materials. However, each layer requires long high temperature heating steps to achieve the necessary sintering and porosity, which is very time and energy intensive for large scale production. Near infrared processing is demonstrated here to reduce the heating time of mesoporous layers within a fully printed lead halide perovskite solar cell from 2 hours to 30 seconds. A stabilised efficiency of 11% was achieved by processing in 30 seconds, identical to that of devices heated in 2 hours. For the first time the effect of residual binder in the carbon electrode on the electron lifetime and charge transfer within devices has been investigated. Furthermore cross section EDX mapping of perovskite infiltration provides a greater understanding into the processing requirements of these devices vital to enable commercialisation.

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