Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title Thermally integrated photoelectrochemical devices with perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells: a modular approach for scalable direct water splitting
ID_Doc 16083
Authors Maragno, ARA; Morozan, A; Fize, J; Pellat, M; Artero, V; Charton, S; Matheron, M
Title Thermally integrated photoelectrochemical devices with perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells: a modular approach for scalable direct water splitting
Year 2024
Published Sustainable Energy & Fuels, 8, 16
DOI 10.1039/d4se00547c
Abstract Direct solar water splitting appears to be a promising route to produce hydrogen, avoiding competition for electricity with other important economic uses. Halogenated hybrid perovskites recently enabled the demonstration of efficient and potentially low-cost photoelectrochemical cells and PV-coupled electrolysers, reaching high efficiencies but so far limited to a small active area of a few mm2, in the case of perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells. Here, we show the added value of integrating a thermal exchanger into the system thanks to additive manufacturing, providing a thermally integrated photoelectrochemical cell (IPEC) with performance doubled compared to the device without any heat exchanger (from 3.3 to 8% STH). In addition, we develop a modular approach to scale-up this concept from 7.6 to 342 cm2, highlighting statistical variations in the efficiency of single integrated photoelectrochemical cells and their origin. We conduct an outdoor stability test for 72 hours, achieving a STH performance of 6.3%, and investigate the causes of device degradation through the easy disassembly of the integrated photoelectrochemical devices. We identify the interface between the perovskite layer and p-layer as critical for achieving stable photoelectrochemical devices integrating perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells. Thermally integrated photoelectrochemical cells made of perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells and PEM electrolysers were scaled in modules up to 342 cm2. Direct hydrogen production was demonstrated outdoors with a STH efficiency of 6.3%.
Author Keywords
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:001269162200001
WoS Category Chemistry, Physical; Energy & Fuels; Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Research Area Chemistry; Energy & Fuels; Materials Science
PDF https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2024/se/d4se00547c
Similar atricles
Scroll