Stacking solar cells on top of each other increases efficiency. Researchers at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), together with partners in the EU project PERCISTAND, have now produced perovskite / CIS tandem solar cells with an efficiency of almost 25 percent - the highest for this technology to date. In addition, the material combination ensures lightness and versatility, so that the use of these tandem solar cells is also conceivable on vehicles, portable devices and foldable or rollable devices. The researchers present their work in the ACS Energy Letters journal.
Perovskite solar cells have undergone a steep development in just ten years. In terms of efficiency, they can already be compared with the long-established silicon solar cells. Perovskites are innovative materials with a special crystal structure. Researchers worldwide are currently working on making perovskite photovoltaics ready for practical use. The more electricity they generate per unit area, the more attractive solar cells are for end users.
The efficiency can be increased by stacking two or more solar cells. If each solar cell absorbs a different part of the sunlight spectrum particularly efficiently, inherent losses can be reduced and efficiency increases. This indicates how much of the incident light is converted into electricity. Thanks to their versatility, perovskite solar cells are ideal as part of such tandems. Tandem solar cells made of perovskites and silicon have achieved a record efficiency of over 29 percent - significantly higher than that of individual cells made of perovskites (25.7 percent) and silicon (26.7 percent).