SOLUTION-PROCESSED ANTIREFLECTIVE COATING FOR BACK-CONTACT PEROVSKITE SOLAR CELLS
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Authors
Bacal, Dorota M.
Lal, Niraj N.
Jumabekov, Askhat N.
Hou, Qicheng
Hu, Yinghong
Lu, Jianfeng
Chesman, Anthony S. R.
Bach, Udo
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Optics Express
Abstract
Back-contact architectures for perovskite solar cells eliminate parasitic-absorption
losses caused by the electrode and charge collection layers but increase surface reflection due to
the high refractive index mismatch at the air/perovskite interface. To mitigate this, a ∼85 nm
thick layer of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), with a refractive index between those of air
and perovskite, has been applied as an antireflective coating. Transfer matrix modelling is used
to determine the ideal PMMA layer thickness, with UV-Vis spectroscopy measurements used to
confirm the increase in absorption that arises through the application of the antireflective coating.
The deposition of a thin film of PMMA via spin coating onto a solar cell results in a 20–30%
relative increase in short circuit current density and stable power output density.
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Citation
Bacal, D. M., Lal, N. N., Jumabekov, A. N., Hou, Q., Hu, Y., Lu, J., Chesman, A. S. R., & Bach, U. (2020). Solution-processed antireflective coating for back-contact perovskite solar cells. Optics Express, 28(9), 12650. https://doi.org/10.1364/oe.384039
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