Frontiers in Energy Research (Jul 2023)
Impact of tellurium as an anion dopant on the photovoltaic performance of wide-bandgap Cu(In,Ga)Se2 thin-film solar cells with rubidium fluoride post-deposition treatment
Abstract
The development of wide-bandgap Cu(In,Ga)Se2 thin films is crucial in order to reach the theoretical Shockley–Queisser limit values in single-crystal solar cells. However, the performance of solar cells based on wide-bandgap thin film absorbers has lagged significantly compared to that of their narrow-bandgap counterparts. Herein, we develop a feasible strategy to improve the photovoltaic performance of wide-bandgap Cu(In,Ga)Se2 chalcopyrite thin-film solar cells by simultaneously doping with both RbF PDT and Te2− anions as dopants in the absorber layer during the three-stage co-evaporation process. Besides inducing significant change in the GGI gradient, the synergistic effect of the Te2− anion dopant is rather beneficial in terms of controlling grain size, defects in grain boundaries, and charge carrier lifetime for encouraging charge separation and extraction, which contributes to simultaneously boosting short-circuit current density and fill factor. Te-poor devices afford an impressive efficiency of 9.58%, compared to 6.43% for control devices. More importantly, the efficiency and Voc values obtained for wide-bandgap-based thin-film solar cells containing Te anions were the highest compared to their counterparts as reported in the literature. These results demonstrate the role of Te2− anions in wide-bandgap absorber thin films on the photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells and the potential of this approach for use in reasonable and effective design of highly efficient wide-bandgap thin-film solar cells.
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