January 02, 2024
By Tina Casey
Perovskite Solar Cells Are Going
Lead-Free, Eventually
June 21, 2021- NREL researcher Mengjin Yang holds
a rigid glass perovskite module. (Photo by Dennis Schroeder / NREL)
Perovskite solar cells first bubbled up through
the corridors of research laboratories back in 2006 with the promise
of low cost materials and high solar conversion efficiency. They
haven’t materialized on the mainstream market quite yet, but one key
barrier to widespread adoption is finally on the verge of falling.
Why Perovskite Solar Cells Need Lead…
Perovskites are lab-grown optical
materials based on the structure of the naturally occurring mineral
perovskite. The material is fragile on its own, so lead is commonly
used as a stabilizer. The American
Institute of Physics lists CH3NH3PbI3 and
CH3NH3PbBr3 among
the most common formulas used to fabricate perovskite solar cells.
The presence of lead in perovskite
solar cells is not a surprise. Though lead is a toxic substance, it
has been the go-to stabilizer for the the solder used in all sorts of
electronic devices, which typically consists of 27%
lead and 63% tin.
Electronic devices do not leach
lead into the environment like other known hazards, such as leaded
paint, gasoline, cosmetics, certain types of ammunition,
and the soldering used in water systems. Nevertheless, misuse or
improper disposal of e-waste can pose hazards. The EU banned tin-lead
solder for consumer devices in 1999 and the US followed suit in 2006,
though it is still permitted for other uses.
…For Now
Assuming that some markets for
perovskite solar cells will be similarly permitted, several companies
already appear close to commercializing solar cells that pair perovskite
with silicon or other photovoltaic materials,
aiming for a balance between durability, solar conversion efficiency,
and cost.
In 2021 the US Department of
Energy also launched a competition called the
Perovskite Start-Up Prize to stimulate
activity among American innovators.
In addition to startups, legacy
electronic firms like Panasonic are also jumping into the pool. Last
August Panasonic provided an update of its work on building-integrated
perovskite solar cells. Called “Energy-Generating
Glasses,” the new technology is being
pilot-tested through 2024 in Panasonic’s “Future Co-Creation FINECOURT
III” model house.
The perovskite market already
shows signs of rapid expansion. “The global perovskite solar cell
market size is estimated to surpass around USD 2,479.2 million by
2032, increasing from USD 135.6 million in 2023,” the firm Precedence
Research reported in December.
“However, challenges related to long-term
stability and environmental concerns need to be addressed for
widespread commercial adoption,” they advised.
Still, the search for lead-free perovskite solar
cells has continued apace, motivated by the potential for driving down
the cost of solar power in broader markets.
One key material of focus is tin, which shares
the same Group 14 space on the Periodic Table of Elements with lead.
Back in 2014 CleanTechnica took
note of research at Northwestern University and Oxford University,
indicating that tin
could be a workable substitute for lead. At
the time, though, the solar conversion efficiency of lead-containing
perovskite solar cells was about 17%, while Northwestern’s lead-free
version came in at just 5%. Oxford fared slightly better at 6%.
It’s been slow going since then,
but new insights
into the growth of tin perovskite crystals has
helped to move things along, and signs of progress have appeared in
the past few months. Last August, for example, the journal Applied
Materials & Interfaces published a study of
a tin perovskite formula that achieved 9.7%
power conversion efficiency while retaining
stability.
In November, Applied
Materials & Interfaces published another
study under the title, “Interfacial Molecular Lock Enables Highly
Efficient Tin Perovskite Solar Cells,” in
which the authors report a power conversion efficiency of 14.08% with
minimal degradation.
On January 2 of this year, the
journal Angewandte
Chemie published another study under the
tantalizing title, “Electronically Manipulated Molecular Strategy
Enabling Highly Efficient Tin Perovskite
Photovoltaics.” The authors reported a “a
champion efficiency of 14.67%” for their lead-free formula.
Another development is the
emergence of tandem solar cells, in which a conventional silicon solar
cell is treated with a layer of perovskites. Lead-free
perovskites are difficult to adhere to the
silicon layer without a catastrophic loss of solar efficiency, but the
upcoming April 2024 issue of Next
Materials describes a tandem device that
solves the problem.
Many Roads To The Perovskite Solar Cell Of The Future
Meanwhile, research on leaded perovskite solar
cells continues apace. That includes Northwestern University, where a
research team reported yet another breakthrough last November in the
form of a two-molecule approach.
You can get all the technical
details in the journal Science under
the title, “Bimolecularly passivated interface enables efficient and stable
inverted perovskite solar cells.” The
Northwestern comms team also provides this handy plain-language
explainer:
“By incorporating first, a molecule to address something called
surface recombination, in which electrons are lost when they are
trapped by defects — missing atoms on the surface, and a second
molecule to disrupt recombination at the interface between layers, the
team achieved a National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL) certified
efficiency of 25.1% where
earlier approaches reached efficiencies of just 24.09%.”
In even plainer language, the problem is that
perovskites are really good at trapping solar energy, but they don’t
want to let all of it go. The perovskite layer of a solar cell tends
to re-absorb some electrons that could otherwise be shuttled out
through the transport layer.
Previous attempts to solve the problem relied on
the molecule PDAI2 (propane diammonium diiodide) to prevent re-absorbtion.
The new research tapped sulfur to work with PDAI2 for maximum
efficiency.
The research team anticipates that their findings
can be applied to tandem perovskite-silicon solar cells. Meanwhile,
next steps include exploring additional molecular combinations to
boost perovskite solar cell efficiency.
Beyond Tin
To the extent that these findings
could also be applied to lead-free perovskite solar cells, tin is not
the only option. Last December, the journal Results
in Engineering published a
state-of-the-science review of lead-free
alternatives, primarily consisting of metals
including germanium, titanium, silver, bismuth, and copper as well as
tin. The journal Nature published
a similar study in November, focusing on germanium as
well as tin and several other formulations.
Something must be cooking in the
germanium field because the journal Synthetic
Materials also chipped in its two cents
around the same time, with a review focused specifically on the
ability of a
germanium-tin combo to resolve stability
issues with lead-free perovskite solar cells.
“Numerous techniques and materials are being
explored to increase the stability of SnGe PSCs [tin-germanium
perovskite solar cells] against moisture, temperature, oxygen, and
ultraviolet radiation,” they concluded, though apparently the material
is not quite ready for prime time.
Follow me @tinamcasey on Bluesky, Threads, Post, and LinkedIn.
Photo (cropped): Perovskite solar cells were the (courtesy of US
Department of Energy.
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