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Lead out, Tin in for Cheap Non-Silicon Solar Cells

May 06, 2014 by Jeff Shepard

Lead is not an essential component of a new kind of low-cost, high-efficiency solar cell, new experiments show. A team led by researchers at Oxford University has demonstrated that the lead in solar cells based on lead halide perovskites can be replaced with tin. Perovskite solar cells, pioneered by the Oxford team, promise to be cheap and easy to mass produce and have already achieved 17% efficiency at turning sunlight into electricity after just two years of research – potentially transforming prospects for cheap large-area solar energy generation.

In this new research the team looked at what could replace the lead currently used in perovskite solar cells to help them generate energy. Although the amount of lead in each cell is tiny, the presence of the metal could still be an issue when it comes to commercialization, with firms looking at the entire lifecycle of perovskite solar cells products and their disposal. In a paper to be published in the journal Energy & Environmental Science the researchers report that they have created the first lead-free perovskite solar cell – with non-toxic tin replacing lead in the cell's absorbing layer.

“We wanted to try and replace the lead with something similar but non-toxic. Tin has been reported in perovskites before, but not in a solar cell, so we decided to see if it would work,” said Nakita Noel of Oxford University's Department of Physics, first author of the paper. “We found that by using tin we managed to keep everything that is good about lead in a solar cell but use a metal that is safe, cheap, and abundant.”

The prototype cell achieved 6% efficiency at turning sunlight into electricity but the team believes that in theory such cells could achieve much higher efficiencies, over 20%, as long as the material can be made more stable. If a stable version can be created, which the team are currently developing, it could provide an alternative that is as efficient as conventional silicon-based solar cells whilst being non-toxic, not requiring intensive energy input and be much cheaper and easier to mass produce.

“The demonstration of solar cells using tin-based perovskites is a clear indication that good solar cell operation is not unique to lead, and therefore also opens up the use of other similar metals in the perovskite structure, leading to a multitude of new research avenues for optimizing these materials,” added team leader, Henry Snaith.

Because the prototype lead-free material degrades in the presence of oxygen and moisture, the tin-based cell had to be prepared and sealed in a nitrogen atmosphere. The researchers are confident that further work will enable them to create cells that can be manufactured and are stable, and can operate in air for long periods of time.

The perovskite blends require not much more than bench-top, wet-chemistry techniques that are well within the industry's ability to use, researchers say. Scientists at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory have suggested that the maximum theoretical efficiency individual perovskite cells can achieve is around 31 percent, or higher if the cells are stacked together to form multi-junction cells.