Conduction Band Energy-Level Engineering for Improving Open-Circuit Voltage in Antimony Selenide Nanorod Array Solar Cells

Adv Sci (Weinh). 2021 Aug;8(16):e2100868. doi: 10.1002/advs.202100868. Epub 2021 Jun 10.

Abstract

Antimony selenide (Sb2 Se3 ) nanorod arrays along the [001] orientation are known to transfer photogenerated carriers rapidly due to the strongly anisotropic one-dimensional crystal structure. With advanced light-trapping structures, the Sb2 Se3 nanorod array-based solar cells have excellent broad spectral response properties, and higher short-circuit current density than the conventional planar structured thin film solar cells. However, the interface engineering for the Sb2 Se3 nanorod array-based solar cell is more crucial to increase the performance, because it is challenging to coat a compact buffer layer with perfect coverage to form a uniform heterojunction interface due to its large surface area and length-diameter ratio. In this work, an intermeshing In2 S3 nanosheet-CdS composite as the buffer layer, compactly coating on the Sb2 Se3 nanorod surface is constructed. The application of In2 S3 -CdS composite buffers build a gradient conduction band energy configuration in the Sb2 Se3 /buffer heterojunction interface, which reduces the interface recombination and enhances the transfer and collection of photogenerated electrons. The energy-level regulation minimizes the open-circuit voltage deficit at the interfaces of buffer/Sb2 Se3 and buffer/ZnO layers in the Sb2 Se3 solar cells. Consequently, the Sb2 Se3 nanorod array solar cell based on In2 S3 -CdS composite buffers achieves an efficiency of as high as 9.19% with a VOC of 461 mV.

Keywords: In2S3-CdS composite buffers; Sb2Se3 nanorod arrays; gradient band structure; heterojunction interface; solar cells.