A theoretical study on Sb2S3 solar cells: The path to overcome the efficiency barrier of 8%

Maykel Courel, Thalía Jiménez, A. Arce-Plaza, D. Seuret-Jiménez, J. P. Morán-Lázaro, F. J. Sánchez-Rodríguez

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

Sb2S3 semiconductor is among the absorber materials that have currently received an increased attention from scientific community since it presents adequate physical properties for solar cell fabrication. In addition, it is also based on abundant and relatively low-toxic elements. Nevertheless, so far, Sb2S3 solar cells in planar configuration are limited to efficiency values lower than 8%, being mechanisms behind such low performances still unknown. In this work we perform theoretical calculations to study the impact of recombination mechanisms at both Sb2S3 bulk material and Sb2S3/CdS interface on solar cells, in order to explain low efficiencies reported for this technology, for the first time. The comparison of model outcomes to the experimental data reported in the literature demonstrates good correspondence. It is found that current Sb2S3 solar cells are dominated by a combination of factors such as non-ideal series and shunt resistances, Sb2S3 non-radiative recombination and Sb2S3/CdS interface recombination. By improving Sb2S3/CdS interface and Sb2S3 bulk material quality, a solar cell efficiency of 11.8% could be achieved, which is limited by the effect of series and shunt resistances. Therefore, the same attention should be paid to both defects and resistances to promote device efficiency over 12%, achieving a new record value of 18.4%. Conditions under which each loss mechanism is dominant are presented and discussed. Finally, it is demonstrated that under optimized conditions and with the use of an antireflection coating layer, an efficiency about 20% is expected.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110123
JournalSolar Energy Materials and Solar Cells
Volume201
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2019

Keywords

  • Interface recombination
  • Loss mechanisms
  • SbS solar cells
  • Solar cell modeling

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