Additive engineering for Sb$_2$S$_3$ indoor photovoltaics with efficiency exceeding 17%
Xiao Chen, Xiaoxuan Shu, Jiangcheng Zhou, Lei Wan, Peng Xiao, Yuchen, Fu, Junzhi Ye, Yi-Teng Huang, Bin Yan, Dingjiang Xue, Tao Chen, Jiejie Chen,, Robert L. Z. Hoye, and Ru Zhou

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that additive engineering with monoethanolamine significantly improves Sb$_2$S$_3$ solar cell quality, achieving over 17% efficiency for indoor photovoltaics, suitable for powering IoT devices.
Contribution
It introduces a novel additive engineering method using monoethanolamine to enhance Sb$_2$S$_3$ film quality and indoor photovoltaic efficiency beyond previous records.
Findings
Achieved 17.55% efficiency under indoor lighting conditions.
Controlled film nucleation and growth with additive engineering.
Enabled large-area modules for IoT sensor power.
Abstract
Indoor photovoltaics (IPVs) have attracted increasing attention for sustainably powering Internet of Things (IoT) electronics. SbS is a promising IPV candidate material with a bandgap of ~1.75 eV, which is near the optimal value for indoor energy harvesting. However, the performance of SbS solar cells is limited by nonradiative recombination, closely associated with the poor-quality absorber films. Additive engineering is an effective strategy to improved the properties of solution-processed films. This work shows that the addition of monoethanolamine (MEA) into the precursor solution allows the nucleation and growth of SbS films to be controlled, enabling the deposition of high-quality SbS absorbers with reduced grain boundary density, optimized band positions and increased carrier concentration. Complemented with computations, it is revealed that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChalcogenide Semiconductor Thin Films
