Mitigation of parasitic leakage current in indoor perovskite photovoltaic modules using porous alumina interlayer

  • Gyeong G. Jeon
  • , Da Seul Lee
  • , Min Jun Choi
  • , You Hyun Seo
  • , Shujuan Huang
  • , Jong H. Kim
  • , Seong Sik Shin
  • , Jincheol Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Indoor photovoltaics are limited by their inherently low-photogenerated carrier density, leading to heightened carrier recombination and adverse leakage currents compared with conventional solar cells operating under 1 sun condition. To address these problems, this work incorporates a porous insulating interlayer (Al2O3) in perovskite devices, which effectively mitigates recombination and parasitic leakage current. A systematic investigation of the relationship between shunt resistance, photocarrier generation, and recombination at different light intensities demonstrates the effectiveness of the alumina interlayer in perovskite solar cells under low-light conditions. Moreover, the practicability of the alumina interlayer was demonstrated through its successful implementation in a large-area perovskite solar module (PSM). With bandgap engineering, the optimized PSM achieves a remarkable power conversion efficiency of 33.5% and a record-breaking power density of 107.3 μW cm−2 under 1000 lux illumination. These results underscore the potential of alumina interlayers in improving energy harvesting performance, particularly in low-light indoor environments. (Figure presented.).

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12455
JournalEcoMat
Volume6
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • alumina interlayer
  • low-light intensity
  • parasitic leakage current
  • perovskite solar cells
  • photovoltaic devices

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