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A step toward lightweight, durable solar panels

A study in Joule boosts efficiency and operational stability of perovskite solar cells

Solar panels
Publish date

Perovskite solar cells are among the most promising candidates for the next generation of photovoltaics: lightweight, flexible, and potentially very low-cost. However, their tendency to degrade under sunlight and heat has so far limited widespread adoption. Now, a new study published in Joule presents an innovative and scalable strategy to overcome this key limitation.

A research team led by the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), in collaboration with the University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Western Switzerland (HES⁠-⁠SO) and the Politecnico di Milano, has developed a bulk passivation technique that involves adding the molecule TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl) to the perovskite film and applying a brief infrared heating pulse lasting just half a second.

This approach enables the repair of near-invisible crystalline defects inside the material, boosting solar cell efficiency beyond 20% and maintaining that performance for several months under operating conditions. Using positron annihilation spectroscopy—a method involving antimatter particles that probe atomic-scale defects—the researchers confirmed a significant reduction in vacancy-type defects.

The proposed method is fast, solvent-free, and compatible with roll-to-roll processing, similar to that used in the printing industry. This makes the technology promising not just in the lab, but also for future industrial-scale production.

Rafael Ferragut, researcher and teacher at the Department of Physics, co-author of the study.

These results mark a significant step toward the large-scale production of durable, efficient, and lightweight solar sheets, suitable for a wide range of applications—from building integration to wearable electronics.

Read the study

Sandy Sánchez-Alonso, Lukas Pfeifer, Ornella Vaccarelli, et al.
TEMPO bulk passivation boosts the performance and operational stability of rapid-annealed FAPI perovskite solar cells,
Joule, 2025, 101972, ISSN 2542-4351.