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Stacking solar cells with decreasing band gaps to form tandems presents the possibility of overcoming the single-junction Shockley-Queisser limit in photovoltaics. The rapid development of solution-processed perovskites has brought perovskite single-junction efficiencies >20%. However, this process has yet to enable monolithic integration with industry-relevant textured crystalline silicon solar cells. We report tandems that combine solution-processed micrometer-thick perovskite top cells with fully textured silicon heterojunction bottom cells. To overcome the charge-collection challenges in micrometer-thick perovskites, we enhanced threefold the depletion width at the bases of silicon pyramids. Moreover, by anchoring a self-limiting passivant (1-butanethiol) on the perovskite surfaces, we enhanced the diffusion length and further suppressed phase segregation. These combined enhancements enabled an independently certified power conversion efficiency of 25.7% for perovskite-silicon tandem solar cells. These devices exhibited negligible performance loss after a 400-hour thermal stability test at 85°C and also after 400 hours under maximum power point tracking at 40°C.
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Yi Hou
Hengyang Normal University
Erkan Aydın
Center for NanoScience
Michele De Bastiani
Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology (Switzerland)
Science
University of Toronto
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
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Hou et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9db3c2a25b240b7a3de44 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaz3691
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