Antimony Selenide Solar Cells Fabricated by Hybrid Reactive Magnetron Sputtering

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Aug 5;13(15):2257. doi: 10.3390/nano13152257.

Abstract

The fabrication of Sb2Se3 thin-film solar cells deposited by a pulsed hybrid reactive magnetron sputtering (PHRMS) was proposed and examined for different growth conditions. The influence of growth temperature and Se pulse period were studied in terms of morphology, crystal structure, and composition. The Sb2Se3 growth showed to be dependent on the growth temperature, with a larger crystal size for growth at 270 °C. By controlling the Se pulse period, the crystal structure and crystal size could be modified as a function of the supplied Se amount. The solar cell performance for Sb2Se3 absorbers deposited at various temperatures, Se pulse periods and thicknesses were assessed through current-voltage characteristics. A power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 3.7% was achieved for a Sb2Se3 solar cell with 900 nm thickness, Sb2Se3 deposited at 270 °C and Se pulses with 0.1 s duration and period of 0.5 s. Finally, annealing the complete solar cell at 100 °C led to a further improvement of the Voc, leading to a PCE of 3.8%, slightly higher than the best reported Sb2Se3 solar cell prepared by sputtering without post-selenization.

Keywords: Sb2Se3; hybrid sputtering; solar cell; sputtering; thin-film photovoltaics.

Grants and funding

We acknowledge financial support through the “Micro-concentrator thin film solar cells (MiconCell)” project (028922), co-funded by the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal) and the ERDF through COMPETE2020. D.B. thanks FCT for the Ph.D. Grant (No. SFRH/BD/150638/2020) A.P.-R. acknowledges financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities and FEDER (ERDF: European Regional Development Fund) under the FEDER/Junta de Castilla y León Research Grant number SA121P20. A.P.-R. also acknowledges the financial support received from the Marie Skłodowska Curie-COFUND program under the Horizon 2020 research and innovation initiative of the European Union, within the framework of the USAL4Excellence program (grant agreement 101034371). M.A. thanks FCT for the Ph.D. Grant (2020.06063.BD). A.C. acknowledges funding through the MSCA grant CIGNUS (#838771).