The curious case of Perovskite Solar Cells.

Part 1: Getting the feet wet.

Aswath
Finding The Joule

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Two years after my graduation thesis (titled Long-Term Stability of Scalable Perovskite Architecture) I look back at the phenomenon called Perovskite Solar cells (PSC for convenience). Through this article, I survey the landscape of PSCs and try to see if the challenges I knew (and faced) during my thesis duration are addressed, or not. I also attempt to demystify the science of it, the green side and the not-so green side.

First things first, what is a “Perovskite”?

A cursory Google search would give you the headlines: Perovskite is both a material (Calcium Titanium Oxide, CaTiO₃) and a class of chemical compounds which has a similar crystal structure as this material. This structure is denoted as ABX₃, and the molecule is cubic. The typical “cube” has the B element in the middle, the A element in the corner vertices, and the X in what is called “Face center”. You can see this following schematic for reference.

A typical Perovskite Structure (Korjus, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

Perovskites are the hot topic of research in several fields outside of solar cells as well. For example, superconductivity, lasers, assisted

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Aswath
Finding The Joule

Jack of a few trades, jackass of none, master of one.