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Consensus statement for stability assessment and reporting for perovskite photovoltaics based on ISOS procedures

Authors :
Khenkin, Mark V.
Katz, Eugene A.
Abate, Antonio
Bardizza, Giorgio
Berry, Joseph J.
Brabec, Christoph
Brunetti, Francesca
Bulovi��, Vladimir
Burlingame, Quinn
Di Carlo, Aldo
Cheacharoen, Rongrong
Cheng, Yi-Bing
Colsmann, Alexander
Cros, Stephane
Domanski, Konrad
Dusza, Micha��
Fell, Christopher J.
Forrest, Stephen R.
Galagan, Yulia
Di Girolamo, Diego
Gr��tzel, Michael
Hagfeldt, Anders
Von Hauff, Elizabeth
Hoppe, Harald
Kettle, Jeff
K��bler, Hans
Leite, Marina S.
Liu, Shengzhong
Loo, Yueh-Lin
Luther, Joseph M.
Ma, Chang-Qi
Madsen, Morten
Manceau, Matthieu
Matheron, Muriel
McGehee, Michael
Meitzner, Rico
Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja
Nogueira, Ana Flavia
Odaba����, ��a��la
Osherov, Anna
Park, Nam-Gyu
Reese, Matthew O.
De Rossi, Francesca
Saliba, Michael
Schubert, Ulrich S.
Snaith, Henry J.
Stranks, Samuel D.
Tress, Wolfgang
Troshin, Pavel A.
Turkovic, Vida
Veenstra, Sjoerd
Visoly-Fisher, Iris
Walsh, Aron
Watson, Trystan
Xie, Haibing
Y��ld��r��m, Ramazan
Zakeeruddin, Shaik Mohammed
Zhu, Kai
Lira-Cantu, Monica
Publisher :
Nature Research

Abstract

Improving the long-term stability of perovskite solar cells is critical to the deployment of this technology. Despite the great emphasis laid on stability-related investigations, publications lack consistency in experimental procedures and parameters reported. It is therefore challenging to reproduce and compare results and thereby develop a deep understanding of degradation mechanisms. Here, we report a consensus between researchers in the field on procedures for testing perovskite solar cell stability, which are based on the International Summit on Organic Photovoltaic Stability (ISOS) protocols. We propose additional procedures to account for properties specific to PSCs such as ion redistribution under electric fields, reversible degradation and to distinguish ambient-induced degradation from other stress factors. These protocols are not intended as a replacement of the existing qualification standards, but rather they aim to unify the stability assessment and to understand failure modes. Finally, we identify key procedural information which we suggest reporting in publications to improve reproducibility and enable large data set analysis.

Subjects

Subjects :
13. Climate action
7. Clean energy

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1a6e2fd6bd003a902612680dcdc3ff0e