1. Research Background and Recent Progress of Perovskite Photovoltaics2. Halide Perovskite Materials, Structural Dimensionality and Synthesis3. Microstructures and Grain Boundaries of Halide Perovskite Thin Films4. Defect Properties of Halide Perovskites for Photovoltaic Applications5. Physics of Perovskite Solar Cells: Efficiency, Open-Circuit Voltage, and Recombination6. Ionic/Electronic Conduction and Capacitance of Halide Perovskite Materials7. Hysteresis of I-V Performance: Its Origin and Engineering for Elimination8. High-Efficiency Solar Cells with Polyelemental, Multicomponent Perovskite Materials9. All-inorganic Perovskite Photovoltaics10. Sn-Based Halide Perovskite Solar Cells11. Quantum Dots of Halide Perovskite12. Perovskite Light-Emitting Diode Technologies13. Perovskites Enabled Highly Sensitive and Fast Photodetectors14. Metal Halide Perovskites for Sensitive X-ray Detectors15. Perovskite-Based Multijunction Solar Cells
Tsutomu Miyasaka received his Doctor of Engineering from The University of Tokyo in 1981. In 2001, after 20 years R&D work at Fuji Photo Film, Co., he moved to Toin University of Yokohama (TUY), Japan, as Professor in Graduate School of Engineering, where he served as the dean of Graduate School (2006-2009). In 2004, he has established a TUY-based company, Peccell Technologies, serving as CEO. Currently he is Professor of TUY and a fellow of Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology (RCAST) of The University of Tokyo. Since the discovery of the organic inorganic hybrid perovskite as PV material in 2006, his research has been focused on R&Ds of the halide perovskite PV device. He was awarded a Ministry of Science & Education Prize in 2009 on his green sustainable solar cell technology. In 2017 he received Chemical Society of Japan (CSJ) Award and Clarivate (Thomson Reuter) Citation Laureate in 2017.