Atomic-Scale Defect Reconfiguration via Thermally Induced Structural Ordering for High-Efficiency Sb2Se3Solar Cells

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Abstract

The photovoltaic performance of antimony triselenide (Sb2Se3) thin-film solar cells is fundamentally limited by deep-level defects originating from structural disorder, which severely limit carrier lifetimes. Herein, we propose a thermodynamically driven disorder-to-order transition pathway in Sb2Se3thin films, enabled by a solution-processable MgCl2treatment that facilitates atomic-scale defect passivation across the surface, bulk, and bottom regions. First-principles calculations reveal that Mg2+and Clions preferentially occupy Sb and Se vacancies, respectively, thereby modulating vacancy concentrations and blocking atomic migration pathways, which effectively reduces the concentration of pre-existing antisite defects. In parallel, the in situ formation of metastable intermediates (e.g., MgSe, MgSe2, and Se37Cl) acts as a kinetic accelerator for microstructural reconstruction, driving the transformation of disordered nanograins into highly oriented, micron-scale single crystals. This synergistic ionic and structural reconfiguration leads to a 10-fold reduction in trap density and extends photocarrier lifetimes from 0.08–2.6 to 2.7–17 μs, substantially mitigating nonradiative recombination. Consequently, vapor-transport-deposited Sb2Se3solar cells achieve a certified efficiency of 9.31%, establishing a benchmark. This work provides a mechanistic framework that integrates ionic defect chemistry with lattice ordering, offering a generalizable pathway for enabling low-dimensional photovoltaics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)33460-33472
Number of pages13
JournalACS Nano
Volume19
Issue number37
DOIs
StatePublished - 23 Sep 2025

Keywords

  • SbSesolar cells
  • atomic-scale defect passivation
  • defect formation energy
  • disorder−order transition
  • high-efficiency

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