# Maximum efficiencies and performance limiting factors of inorganic and   hybrid perovskite solar cells

**Authors:** Yoshitsune Kato, Shohei Fujimoto, Masayuki Kozawa, Hiroyuki, Fujiwara

arXiv: 1904.06033 · 2019-08-28

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new formalism to accurately predict the absolute performance limits of various thin-film solar cells, revealing potential efficiencies and limiting factors for record-efficiency and hybrid perovskite solar cells.

## Contribution

A novel formalism for precise efficiency limit prediction of thin-film solar cells, including hybrid perovskites, surpassing traditional models like Shockley-Queisser.

## Key findings

- Over 30% efficiency possible with certain materials.
- Hybrid perovskites face limitations from voltage and fill-factor losses.
- New efficiency limits can better predict real-world solar cell performance.

## Abstract

The Shockley and Queisser limit, a well-known efficiency limit for a solar cell, is based on unrealistic physical assumptions and its maximum limit is seriously overestimated. To understand the power loss mechanisms of record-efficiency cells, a more rigorous approach is necessary. Here, we have established a new formalism that can accurately predict absolute performance limits of solar cells in conventional thin film form. In particular, we have estimated the maximum efficiencies of 13 well-studied solar cell materials [GaAs, InP, CdTe, a-Si:H, CuInSe2, CuGaSe2, CuInGaSe2, Cu2ZnSnSe4, Cu2ZnSnS4, Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4, Cu2ZnGeSe4, CH3NH3PbI3, HC(NH2)2PbI3] in a 1-um-thick physical limit. Our calculation shows that over 30% efficiencies can be achieved for absorber layers with sharp absorption edges (GaAs, InP, CdTe, CuInGaSe2, Cu2ZnGeSe4). Nevertheless, many record-efficiency polycrystalline solar cells, including hybrid perovskites, are limited by open-circuit voltage and fill-factor losses. We show that the maximum conversion efficiencies described here present new alternative limits that can predict the power generation of real-world solar cells.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.06033