Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/6954
Title: Antimony chalcogenide-based thin film solar cells: Device engineering routes to boost the performance
Authors: Yadav, Harekrishna
Keywords: Antimony;Antimony compounds;Cell engineering;Chalcogenides;Open circuit voltage;Perovskite;Semiconductor doping;Sulfide minerals;Sulfur compounds;Thin film circuits;Thin films;Device engineering;Device parameters;Light-harvesting;Opto-electronic modeling;Parametric variation;Performance metrics;Performance optimizations;Research interests;Thin film solar cells
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: American Institute of Physics Inc.
Citation: Agarwal, S., Nandal, V., Yadav, H., & Kumar, K. (2021). Antimony chalcogenide-based thin film solar cells: Device engineering routes to boost the performance. Journal of Applied Physics, 129(20) doi:10.1063/5.0047429
Abstract: The use of stibnite (Sb2S3) as a light-harvesting material in thin film solar cells has received considerable research interest during the transition of the millennium. However, the use of perovskite diminished the research in the field, and the potential of antimony Chalcogenides [Sb2(S,Se)3] was not explored thoroughly. Although these materials also provide bandgap tuning like perovskite, by varying the composition of S and Se, it is not as popular as perovskite for the fabrication of solar cells mainly because of the low efficiency of the solar cells based on it. In this paper, we present a landscape of the functional role of various device parameters on the performance of Sb2(S,Se)3-based solar cells. For this purpose, we first calibrate the optoelectronic model used for simulation with the experimental results from the literature. The model is then subjected to parametric variations to explore the performance metrics for this class of solar cells. Our results show that despite the belief that the open circuit voltage is independent of contact layers' doping in proper band-aligned carrier selective thin film solar cells, here we observe otherwise and the open circuit voltage is indeed dependent on the doping density of the contact layers. Using the detailed numerical simulation and analytical model, we further identify the performance optimization route for Sb2(S,Se)3-based thin film solar cells. © 2021 Author(s).
URI: https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0047429
https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/6954
ISSN: 0021-8979
Type of Material: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Department of Mechanical Engineering

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