What happens in a solar cell when the lights go out?

(Nanowerk News) What happens in a solar cell when the lights go out depends heavily on the material being used. In conventional silicon solar cells the answer is quite simple: the electrical current produced by the cell immediately goes to zero.
It is different in so-called perovskite solar cells where the cell continues to supply electricity for a brief moment. Similarly, these cells take a moment to reach full power output when the lights go on. This unwanted effect is called hysteresis.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany, are now able to measure the processes taking place in a perovskite solar cell with great precision (Energy Environmental Science, "How the Formation of Interfacial Charge Causes Hysteresis in Perovskite Solar Cells").
Artistic representation of the layer structure in a perovskite solar cell
Artistic representation of the layer structure in a perovskite solar cell. With a tip above the surface, the voltage in the cell can be measured. (Image: Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung)
Perovskite solar cells are currently electrifying the solar cell community. This new, cheap, and easy-to-process material has almost ideal physical properties for converting light into electricity: as it is pitch-black, a very thin layer of less than a thousandth of a millimeter is sufficient to absorb all incident sunlight.
At the same time, it is a very good electrical conductor, enabling a fast and efficient transfer of the generated electrical charges to the contacts and connected devices. With an efficiency of 22.7% in the conversion of light energy into electrical energy, perovskite solar cells can already outperform the best multicrystalline silicon solar cells (22.3%).
However, in order to further increase efficiency and make perovskite solar cells fit for commercialization, it is very important for researchers to understand all the processes that occur in the solar cell during operation.
Together with researchers from the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland, the groups headed by Jun.-Prof. Dr. Stefan Weber and group leader Dr. Rüdiger Berger in the department of Prof. Butt at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany, have shed light on the processes in perovskite solar cells after switching the light.
To do so, the researchers have deliberately broken solar cells in the middle and polished a tiny area on the cross-section of the cell, only a few millionths of a meter wide. In an atomic force microscope, they then positioned a thin metal tip over the polished cross-sectional area. At its end, this metal tip is only about 10 nanometers wide - more than ten thousand times thinner than a human hair.
Using a method known as Kelvin probe force microscopy, the researchers were able to measure the electrical voltage on the polished cross-sectional area just below the tip. A modification of this technique allowed them to measure voltage profiles across the individual layers of the solar cell with high spatial and high temporal resolution.
The voltage profile across the solar cell is of particular interest, because it affects the separation of the electrical charges generated by the incident light. Due to electrostatic forces, positive charges migrate to the negative pole and negative charges to the positive pole of the voltage. On the illuminated cross-sectional surface of the solar cell, the scientists from Mainz discovered an accumulation of charges at the edge of the perovskite layer. This charge accumulation was stable for a short moment after the light was switched off.
"These charges at the perovskite interfaces play the main role in hysteresis because they maintain an electric field in the cell for about half a second after the light is turned off," explains Stefan Weber. "This means that hysteresis can be influenced or completely suppressed by modifications at these interfaces." This is an important step in the development of perovskite solar cells.
Source: Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung
Subscribe to a free copy of one of our daily
Nanowerk Newsletter Email Digests
with a compilation of all of the day's news.