posted on 2016-05-05, 00:00authored byAndreas Binek, Michiel L. Petrus, Niklas Huber, Helen Bristow, Yinghong Hu, Thomas Bein, Pablo Docampo
Methylammonium
lead iodide (MAPbI3) perovskite based solar cells have
recently emerged as a serious competitor for large scale and low-cost
photovoltaic technologies. However, since these solar cells contain
toxic lead, a sustainable procedure for handling the cells after their
operational lifetime is required to prevent exposure of the environment
to lead and to comply with international electronic waste disposal
regulations. Herein, we report a procedure to remove every layer of
the solar cells separately, which gives the possibility to selectively
isolate the different materials. Besides isolating the toxic lead
iodide in high yield, we show that the PbI2 can be reused
for the preparation of new solar cells with comparable performance
and in this way avoid lead waste. Furthermore, we show that the most
expensive part of the solar cell, the conductive glass (FTO), can
be reused several times without any reduction in the performance of
the devices. With our simple recycling procedure, we address both
the risk of contamination and the waste disposal of perovskite based
solar cells while further reducing the cost of the system. This brings
perovskite solar cells one step closer to their introduction into
commercial systems.