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Research in perovskite-based tandem photovoltaics has emerged as a promising technology and made tremendous breakthroughs in recent years. While high efficiencies have been achieved in perovskite/silicon tandem devices, the long-term stability of the perovskite active layer remains a major challenge for their commercialisation. It is therefore important to take an interdisciplinary approach to expedite the development and deployment of tandem solar cells based on perovskite materials.
In this collection at Nature Communications, Communications Materials, Communications Physics and Scientific Reports, we aim to bring together cutting-edge perovskite/silicon tandems, all-perovskite tandems, and hybrid perovskite tandems crossing multidisciplinary areas, and invite commentaries from experts. Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:
Materials and fundamental research for practical tandem devices
Device architecture design, upscaling and manufacturing
Characterisation and modelling
Stability, reliability, accelerated and outdoor testing
Sustainability, reproducibility and recycling
We welcome the submissions of primary research that fall into any of the above-mentioned categories. All the submissions will be subject to the same peer review process and editorial standard as regular Nature Communications, Communications Materials, Communications Physics and Scientific Reports articles.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 7.
The efficiency of all-perovskite tandem solar cells is impacted by the nonradiative recombination loss in Sn–Pb mixed narrow bandgap perovskite films. Here, the authors utilize a surface polishing agent with surface passivator to deliver films with a close-to-ideal stoichiometric ratio surface.
Mixed Sn-Pb perovskites have emerged as promising photovoltaic materials for both single- and multi-junction solar cells. Here, authors reveal the thermal degradation mechanism and incorporate carboranes for thermal regulation, resulting in stable all-perovskite tandems with efficiency of over 27%.
The disparity in crystallization processes between tin- and lead-based perovskites has been a dominant factor contributing to high defect densities. Here, authors employ a functional molecule to inhibit tin oxidation, realizing monolithic all-perovskite tandems with certified efficiency over 27%.
The conventional solution post-treatment is suboptimal for methylammonium-free and cesium/bromide-enriched wide-bandgap perovskite solar cells. Here, the authors develop a 3D-to-2D perovskite conversion approach for a preferential growth, achieving stabilized efficiency of 28.1% for tandem cells.
The superstate configuration in all-perovskite tandem solar cells is disadvantageous for long-term stability. Here, the authors reverse the processing order and demonstrate substrate configuration to bury oxidizable narrow-bandgap perovskites, and achieve efficiency of 25.3% with long stability.