Investigation of Potential-Induced Degradation and Recovery in Perovskite Minimodules
Article 2024 en
Authors
JZ
Junchuan Zhang
HW
Haodong Wu
YZ
Yi Zhang
Abstract
1 min read
Potential-induced degradation (PID) is a prevalent concern in current commercial photovoltaic technologies that impacts their reliability, with the mechanistic basis for PID being poorly understood. Here we investigate the PID mechanism in perovskite minimodules. Our findings reveal non-uniform degradation in both the photoluminescence intensity and spectral blue shift. Following 60-hour laboratory stress tests, device efficiency drastically decreases by 96%, and the shunt resistance decreases by 97%, accompanied by a significant quantity of Na+ ions (derived from the soda-lime glass) throughout the device structure, leading to a typical PID shunting effect. Interestingly, we observed a rapid recovery of device performance during room-temperature dark storage, in which Na+ ions located close to the glass substrate side rapidly migrate out of the device. Moreover, we also found that the Na+ ions do not appear to diffuse through the grain boundaries but rather their neighboring area and grain interiors, judging by microscopic conductivity mappings. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents the first investigation of PID in large-area perovskite technology that provides insights into the PID mechanisms. And these deeper understandings should contribute to the standardization of PID stressing protocols and ultimately aid in mitigating PID in future perovskite-based applications.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.