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      Evaluation of Hybrid Perovskite Prototypes After 10‐Month Space Flight on the International Space Station

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          Abstract

          Metal halide perovskites (MHPs) have emerged as a prominent new photovoltaic material combining a very competitive power conversion efficiency that rivals crystalline silicon with the added benefits of tunable properties for multijunction devices fabricated from solution which can yield high specific power. Perovskites have also demonstrated some of the lowest temperature coefficients and highest defect tolerance, which make them excellent candidates for aerospace applications. However, MHPs must demonstrate durability in space which presents different challenges than terrestrial operating environments. To decisively test the viability of perovskites being used in space, a perovskite thin film is positioned in low earth orbit for 10 months on the International Space Station, which was the first long‐duration study of an MHP in space. Postflight high‐resolution ultrafast spectroscopic characterization and comparison with control samples reveal that the flight sample exhibits superior photo‐stability, no irreversible radiation damage, and a suppressed structural phase transition temperature by nearly 65 K, broadening the photovoltaic operational range. Further, significant photo‐annealing of surface defects is shown following prolonged light‐soaking postflight. These results emphasize that methylammonium lead iodide can be packaged adequately for space missions, affirming that space stressors can be managed as theorized.

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          Understanding Degradation Mechanisms and Improving Stability of Perovskite Photovoltaics

          This review article examines the current state of understanding in how metal halide perovskite solar cells can degrade when exposed to moisture, oxygen, heat, light, mechanical stress, and reverse bias. It also highlights strategies for improving stability, such as tuning the composition of the perovskite, introducing hydrophobic coatings, replacing metal electrodes with carbon or transparent conducting oxides, and packaging. The article concludes with recommendations on how accelerated testing should be performed to rapidly develop solar cells that are both extraordinarily efficient and stable.
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            Colloidally prepared La-doped BaSnO 3 electrodes for efficient, photostable perovskite solar cells

            Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) exceeding a power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 20% have mainly been demonstrated by using mesoporous titanium dioxide (mp-TiO2) as an electron-transporting layer. However, TiO2 can reduce the stability of PSCs under illumination (including ultraviolet light). Lanthanum (La)-doped BaSnO3 (LBSO) perovskite would be an ideal replacement given its electron mobility and electronic structure, but LBSO cannot be synthesized as well-dispersible fine particles or crystallized below 500°C. We report a superoxide colloidal solution route for preparing a LBSO electrode under very mild conditions (below 300°C). The PSCs fabricated with LBSO and methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3) show a steady-state power conversion efficiency of 21.2%, versus 19.7% for a mp-TiO2 device. The LBSO-based PSCs could retain 93% of their initial performance after 1000 hours of full-Sun illumination.
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              Entropic stabilization of mixed A-cation ABX3 metal halide perovskites for high performance perovskite solar cells

              A mixture of CsPbI3 and FAPbI3 is thermodynamically stabilized in the perovskite phase with respect to the pure δ phases.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Advanced Energy Materials
                Advanced Energy Materials
                Wiley
                1614-6832
                1614-6840
                May 2023
                March 09 2023
                May 2023
                : 13
                : 19
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Physics University of California Merced California 95343 USA
                [2 ] Universities Space Research Association National Aeronautics and Space Administration Cleveland Ohio 44135 USA
                [3 ] Photovoltaic and Electrochemical Systems Branch John H. Glenn Research Center National Aeronautics and Space Administration Cleveland Ohio 44135 USA
                [4 ] Materials, Chemical, and Computational Science Directorate National Renewable Energy Laboratory Golden CO 80401 USA
                [5 ] Department of Chemistry Wilberforce University Wilberforce Ohio 45384 USA
                Article
                10.1002/aenm.202203920
                500b8e34-c250-4f14-a2f0-d6c03c32129e
                © 2023

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