Fluorine-Doped CdS Enables Oriented Growth and Defect Suppression in Sb2Se3 Solar Cells with High Conversion Efficiency

Luyan Shen, Deyang Qin, Er Nie, Shaoqiang Chen, Jiahua Tao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Antimony selenide (Sb2Se3) as a quasi-1D absorber holds promising potential in photovoltaics, but its practical efficiency remains far below the theoretical limit due to challenges such as deep-level defects and difficulties in crystal orientation control. High-efficiency devices typically use cadmium sulfide (CdS) buffer layers made by chemical bath deposition (CBD), but achieving low-defect, stable CdS films is challenging. In the superstrate configuration, the interfacial quality of CdS is recognized as a critical factor influencing the oriented growth of Sb2Se3 and overall device efficiency. This study pioneers the use of fluorine (F)-doping to modulate the microstructure and surface energy states of CBD-CdS, aiming to passivate sulfur vacancies and expose non-polar surface planes (100), thereby inducing preferential orientation of Sb2Se3 along its high-mobility growth direction. Furthermore, effective passivation of sulfur vacancies by F ions substantially improves Sb2Se3 growth kinetics. The optimized films exhibit a reduced Se/Sb ratio (from 1.98 to 1.63), a three-order-of-magnitude decrease in defect capture cross-section (from 10−17 to 10−20), and achieve an efficiency of 9.30%, representing an 18% improvement over the control device. The work proposes a low-temperature, scalable interfacial engineering strategy with broad applicability, offering new insights into defect suppression and crystal orientation optimization for enhanced photovoltaic performance.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • SbSe thin films
  • defect suppression
  • fluorine doped CdS
  • oriented growth
  • solar cells

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Fluorine-Doped CdS Enables Oriented Growth and Defect Suppression in Sb2Se3 Solar Cells with High Conversion Efficiency'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this