Electrodeposition of antimony selenide thin films and application in semiconductor sensitized solar cells

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2014 Feb 26;6(4):2836-41. doi: 10.1021/am405416a. Epub 2014 Jan 27.

Abstract

Sb2Se3 thin films are proposed as an alternative light harvester for semiconductor sensitized solar cells. An innovative electrodeposition route, based on aqueous alkaline electrolytes, is presented to obtain amorphous Sb2Se3. The amorphous to crystalline phase transition takes place during a soft thermal annealing in Ar atmosphere. The potential of the Sb2Se3 electrodeposited thin films in semiconductor sensitized solar cells is evaluated by preparing TiO2/Sb2Se3/CuSCN planar heterojunction solar cells. The resulting devices generate electricity from the visible and NIR photons, exhibiting the external quantum efficiency onset close to 1050 nm. Although planar architecture is not optimized in terms of charge carrier collection, photocurrent as high as 18 mA/cm(2), under simulated (AM1.5G) solar light, is achieved. Furthermore, the effect of the Sb2Se3 thickness and microstructural properties on the photocurrent is analyzed, suggesting the hole transport is the main limiting mechanism. The present findings provide significant insights to design efficient semiconductor sensitized solar cells based on advanced architectures (e.g., nanostructured and tandem), opening wide possibilities for progresses in this emerging photovoltaics technology.