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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dr Jay Patel

Long Term Visitor

Research theme

  • Photovoltaics and nanoscience

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics
jay.patel@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

Influence of interface morphology on hysteresis in vapor-deposited perovskite solar cells

Advanced Electronic Materials Wiley 3:2 (2016) 1600470

Authors:

Jay B Patel, J Wong-Leung, Stephan Van Reenen, Nobuya Sakai, Jacob Tse Wei Wang, Elizabeth S Parrott, Mingzhen Liu, Henry J Snaith, Laura M Herz, Michael Johnston

Abstract:

Hysteresis in the current–voltage characteristics of vapor-deposited perovskite solar cells is shown to originate from an amorphous region of CH3NH3PbI3 at the interface with the device's electron transport layer. Interface engineering is used to produce highly crystalline perovskite material at this interface which results in hysteresis-free evaporated planar heterojunction solar cells.
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Efficient and air-stable mixed-cation lead mixed-halide perovskite solar cells with n-doped organic electron extraction layers

Advanced Materials Wiley 29:5 (2016)

Authors:

Zhiping Wang, David P McMeekin, Nobuya Sakai, Stephan van Reenen, Konrad Wojciechowski, Jay B Patel, Michael Johnston, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

Air-stable doping of the n-type fullerene layer in an n-i-p planar heterojunction perovskite device is capable of enhancing device efficiency and improving device stability. Employing a (HC(NH2 )2 )0.83 Cs0.17 Pb(I0.6 Br0.4 )3 perovskite as the photoactive layer, glass-glass laminated devices are reported, which sustain 80% of their "post burn-in" efficiency over 3400 h under full sun illumination in ambient conditions.
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Photovoltaic mixed-cation lead mixed-halide perovskites: Links between crystallinity, photo-stability and electronic properties

Energy and Environmental Science Royal Society of Chemistry 10:1 (2016) 361-369

Authors:

Waqaas Rehman, David P McMeekin, Jay B Patel, Rebecca L Milot, Michael B Johnston, Henry J Snaith, Laura M Herz

Abstract:

Lead mixed halide perovskites are highly promising semiconductors for both multi-junction photovoltaic and light emitting applications due to their tunable band gaps, with emission and absorption energies spanning the UV-visible to near IR regions. However, many such perovskites exhibit unwanted halide segregation under photoillumination, the cause of which is still unclear. In our study, we establish crucial links between crystal phase stability, photostability and optoelectronic properties of the mixed-cation lead mixed-halide perovskite CsyFA(1-y)Pb(BrxI(1-x))3. We demonstrate a region for caesium content between 0.10 < y < 0.30 which features high crystalline quality, long chargecarrier lifetimes and high charge-carrier mobilities. Importantly, we show that for such high-quality perovskites, photoinduced halide segregation is strongly suppressed, suggesting that high crystalline quality is a prerequisite for good optoelectronic quality and band gap stability. We propose that regions of short-range crystalline order aid halide segregation, possibly by releasing lattice strain between iodide rich and bromide rich domains. For an optimized caesium content, we explore the orthogonal halide-variation parameter space for Cs0.17FA0.83Pb(BrxI(1-x))3 perovskites. We demonstrate excellent charge-carrier mobilities (11-40 cm2 V^−1 s^−1) and diffusion lengths (0.8 - 4.4 µm) under solar conditions across the full iodide-bromide tuning range. Therefore, the addition of caesium yields a more photostable perovskite system whose absorption onsets can be tuned for bandgap-optimized tandem solar cells.

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Perovskite-perovskite tandem photovoltaics with optimized bandgaps

Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (2016)

Authors:

Giles E Eperon, Tomas Leijtens, Kevin A Bush, Rohit Prasanna, Thomas Green, Jacob T-W Wang, David P McMeekin, George Volonakis, Rebecca L Milot, Richard May, Axel Palmstrom, Daniel J Slotcavage, Rebecca A Belisle, Jay B Patel, Elizabeth S Parrott, Rebecca J Sutton, Wen Ma, Farhad Moghadam, Bert Conings, Aslihan Babayigit, Hans-Gerd Boyen, Stacey Bent, Feliciano Giustino, Laura M Herz, Michael B Johnston, Michael D McGehee, Henry J Snaith

Abstract:

Multi-junction solar photovoltaics are proven to deliver the highest performance of any solar cell architecture, making them ideally suited for deployment in an increasingly efficiency driven solar industry. Conventional multi-junction cells reach up to 45% efficiency, but are so costly to manufacture that they are only currently useful for space and solar concentrator photovoltaics. Here, we demonstrate the first four and two-terminal perovskite-perovskite tandem solar cells with ideally matched bandgaps. We develop an infrared absorbing 1.2eV bandgap perovskite, FA0.75Cs0.25Sn0.5Pb0.5I3, which is capable of delivering 13.6% efficiency. By combining this material with a wider bandgap FA0.83Cs0.17Pb(I0.5Br0.5)3 material, we reach initial monolithic two terminal tandem efficiencies of 14.0 % with over 1.75 V open circuitvoltage. We also make mechanically stacked four terminal tandem cells and obtain 18.1 % efficiency for small cells, and 16.0 % efficiency for 1cm^2 cells. Crucially, we find that our infrared absorbing perovskite cells exhibit excellent thermal and atmospheric stability, unprecedented for Sn based perovskites. This device architecture and materials set will enable “all perovskite” thin film solar cells to reach the highest efficiencies in the long term at the lowest costs, delivering a viable photovoltaic technology to supplant fossil fuels.
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Efficient perovskite solar cells by metal ion doping

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 9:9 (2016) 2892-2901

Authors:

Jacob Tse-Wei Wang, Zhiping Wang, Sandeep Pathak, Wei Zhang, Dane W deQuilettes, Florencia Wisnivesky-Rocca-Rivarola, Jian Huang, Pabitra K Nayak, Jay B Patel, Hanis A Mohd Yusof, Yana Vaynzof, Rui Zhu, Ivan Ramirez, Jin Zhang, Caterina Ducati, Chris Grovenor, Michael B Johnston, David S Ginger, Robin J Nicholas, Henry J Snaith
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