Solar cells, devices that convert sunlight into electricity, are helping to reduce greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, promoting a shift toward renewable energy sources. Most solar cells used today are based on silicon, yet researchers have recently been exploring the potential of other photovoltaic materials, particularly perovskites.
Perovskites are a class of photovoltaic materials with strong light absorption. In practical devices, perovskite thin films are typically polycrystalline, meaning they consist of many small crystalline grains. As perovskites absorb sunlight so efficiently, a film thinner than ~1 μm can capture most of the incident solar radiation, whereas conventional crystalline silicon usually requires hundreds of micrometers of active material.
This combination of strong absorption and ultrathin active layers makes perovskite thin-film solar cells particularly well suited for lightweight, flexible, high-efficiency photovoltaic devices. Despite these many advantages, perovskites still face inherent challenges, such as achieving true mechanical flexibility, operational stability, and maintaining high efficiency at large areas simultaneously.








