Perovskite solar cells are attracting global attention as a next-generation photovoltaic technology due to their rapid efficiency improvement and potential for low-cost manufacturing. However, the material systems are still under active development and are known to be sensitive to environmental conditions and illumination characteristics.
For this reason, the solar simulator used in perovskite research must provide not only standard AM1.5G illumination, but also highly stable, reproducible, and well-characterized light.
At SAN-EI, we consider that a solar simulator for perovskite development should satisfy the following essential requirements.
1. High spectral fidelity to the AM1.5G standard
Perovskite materials often exhibit wavelength-dependent responses, particularly in the short-wavelength region. A solar simulator should therefore reproduce the solar spectrum with high accuracy across the relevant spectral range so that device performance measurements reflect realistic solar conditions.
2. Excellent irradiance stability over time
Perovskite devices can exhibit transient behaviors such as light-induced changes or hysteresis effects. If the illumination itself fluctuates, it becomes difficult to distinguish between device behavior and light source instability. The simulator must therefore maintain stable irradiance throughout the measurement period.
3. Good spatial uniformity within the effective irradiation area
Perovskite research frequently involves small laboratory samples. Even in such cases, uniform illumination remains essential to ensure that measured device characteristics represent the entire sample rather than localized variations in light intensity.
4. Reproducibility and traceability of measurements
Results obtained in one laboratory must be comparable with those obtained elsewhere. This requires clearly defined calibration procedures, stable optical components, and verification methods that ensure measurement consistency over time.
5. Operational practicality in laboratory environments
esearchers benefit from systems that allow easy intensity adjustment, repeatable measurement conditions, and reliable long-term operation without complex procedures.
In summary, SAN-EI considers that a solar simulator for perovskite development must combine accurate spectral reproduction, high irradiance stability, uniform illumination, and dependable measurement reproducibility.
These characteristics enable researchers to evaluate device performance with confidence and help accelerate the advancement of next-generation photovoltaic technologies
