Antimony sulfide (SbS) has attracted much attention due to its great prospect to construct highly efficient, cost-effective, and environment-friendly solar cells. The scalable close-spaced sublimation (CSS) is a well-developed physical deposition method to fabricate thin films for photovoltaics. However, the CSS-processed absorber films typically involve small grain size with high-density grain boundaries (GBs), resulting in severe defects-induced charge-carrier nonradiative recombination and further large open-circuit voltage (V) losses. In this work, it is demonstrated that a chemical bath deposited-SbS seed layer can serve as crystal nuclei and mediate the growth of large-grained, highly compact CSS-processed SbS films. This seed-mediated SbS film affords reduced defect density and enhanced charge-carrier transport, which yields an improved power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 4.78% for planar SbS solar cells. Moreover, the V of 0.755 V that is obtained is the highest reported thus far for vacuum-based evaporation and sublimation processed SbS devices. This work demonstrates an effective strategy to deposit high-quality low-defect-density SbS films via vacuum-based physical methods for optoelectronic applications.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11633527 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202409312 | DOI Listing |
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