Photon management of perovskite solar cells (PSCs) is studied by the use of nanohole front contact, which allows improving the JSC of the PSC by providing an improved light incoupling. The front contact integrated with spherical nanocone shaped holes represent a refractive index grating allowing for light incoupling approaching unity while minimizing reflection losses. Besides, the front contact has a comparable refractive index (n~2.5) with the perovskite absorber, which minimizes the front reflections in PSC. Optics and optimization of front contact and solar cell are investigated by three-dimensional (3D) finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations whereas finite element method simulations are used to study the electrical response of the device. Investigations reveal a maximum light incoupling enhancement of 10~12% for the optimized PSC, leading to 10 to 27% JSC enhancement with respect to the planar reference PSC.
Image sensing technology has a great impact on our daily life as well as the entire society, such as health, safety and security, communication systems, and entertainment. The conventional optical color sensors consist of side by side arranged optical filters for three basic colors (blue, green, and red). Hence, the efficiency of such optical color sensors is limited by only 33%. In this study, a vertically stacked color sensor is investigated with perovskite alloys, which has the potential to provide the efficiency approaching 100%. The proposed optical sensor will not be limited by color Moire error or color aliasing. Perovskite materials with suitable bandgaps are determined by applying the energy shifting model and the optical constants are used for further investigations. Quantum efficiencies and spectral responsivities of the described color sensors are investigated by three-dimensional electromagnetic simulations. Investigated spectral sensitivities are further analyzed for the
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