Frontiers in Energy Research (May 2021)

Perspectives of Open-Air Processing to Enable Perovskite Solar Cell Manufacturing

  • Nicholas Rolston,
  • Andrew Sleugh,
  • Justin P. Chen,
  • Oliver Zhao,
  • Thomas W. Colburn,
  • Austin C. Flick,
  • Reinhold H. Dauskardt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2021.684082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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We report high throughput open-air processing techniques for the scalable production of all device and barrier layers for perovskite photovoltaics (PV). This work discusses and resolves some of the most formidable barriers to module-level scaling that the perovskite community has been facing. Our advanced technoeconomic manufacturing analysis indicates that vacuum-based processes with high capital expenditures (CapEx) and low throughputs dominate the cost of production. Open-air fabrication methods offer low CapEx routes to manufacturing, but achieving reproducibility in ambient conditions with varying relative humidity has been a persistent challenge. The use of rapid processing methods with plasma curing to convert films from the solution-state enables reproducibility, moisture immunity, and the highest perovskite PV efficiency produced in open-air. These methods are readily translatable to in-line processing where layers are sequentially deposited without the need for lengthy post-annealing steps that reduce throughput and involve additional equipment. Significant progress is demonstrated in reduced manufacturing costs as perovskites contend as a commercially viable next-generation thin film PV technology.

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