Design and Analysis of Plasmonic-Nanorod-Enhanced Lead-Free Inorganic Perovskite/Silicon Heterojunction Tandem Solar Cell Exceeding the Shockley-Queisser Limit
Md. Sad Abdullah Sami, Arpan Sur, Ehsanur Rahman

TL;DR
This paper presents a simulation study of a fully inorganic, lead-free tandem solar cell with plasmonic enhancements, achieving over 34% efficiency and surpassing the Shockley-Queisser limit, indicating a promising, eco-friendly photovoltaic technology.
Contribution
It introduces a novel lead-free perovskite/silicon tandem design with plasmonic nanorods, demonstrating high efficiency and potential for cost-effective, environmentally friendly solar cells.
Findings
Achieved a 34.93% power conversion efficiency surpassing the Shockley-Queisser limit.
Demonstrated high open-circuit voltage of 1.93 V and fill factor of 84.74%.
Enhanced light absorption using plasmonic gold nanorods, with high efficiency maintained without them.
Abstract
The pursuit of sustainable and highly efficient energy conversion necessitates a transition from toxic and unstable materials to environmentally friendly alternatives. This work presents a simulation-based numerical investigation of a fully inorganic, lead-free tandem solar cell that employs cesium tin-germanium tri-iodide (CsSnGeI3) as the top cell absorber and crystalline silicon (c-Si) as the bottom cell absorber, configured in a silicon heterojunction (SHJ) arrangement. Utilizing CsSnGeI3 as a lead-free perovskite presents a promising solution to the toxicity concerns associated with conventional lead-based perovskites. To further increase near-infrared absorption and reduce the required thickness of the c-Si layer, an ultra-thin gallium antimonide auxiliary absorber is integrated into the SHJ bottom cell. Optical and electrical simulations, conducted using finite-difference…
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