| Literature DB >> 27494110 |
Vera Steinmann1, Rupak Chakraborty1, Paul H Rekemeyer2, Katy Hartman1, Riley E Brandt1, Alex Polizzotti1, Chuanxi Yang3, Tom Moriarty4, Silvija Gradečak2, Roy G Gordon3, Tonio Buonassisi1.
Abstract
As novel absorber materials are developed and screened for their photovoltaic (PV) properties, the challenge remains to reproducibly test promising candidates for high-performing PV devices. Many early-stage devices are prone to device shunting due to pinholes in the absorber layer, producing "false-negative" results. Here, we demonstrate a device engineering solution toward a robust device architecture, using a two-step absorber deposition approach. We use tin sulfide (SnS) as a test absorber material. The SnS bulk is processed at high temperature (400 °C) to stimulate grain growth, followed by a much thinner, low-temperature (200 °C) absorber deposition. At a lower process temperature, the thin absorber overlayer contains significantly smaller, densely packed grains, which are likely to provide a continuous coating and fill pinholes in the underlying absorber bulk. We compare this two-step approach to the more standard approach of using a semi-insulating buffer layer directly on top of the annealed absorber bulk, and we demonstrate a more than 3.5× superior shunt resistance Rsh with smaller standard error σRsh. Electron-beam-induced current (EBIC) measurements indicate a lower density of pinholes in the SnS absorber bulk when using the two-step absorber deposition approach. We correlate those findings to improvements in the device performance and device performance reproducibility.Entities:
Keywords: device shunting; novel absorber materials; performance reliability; photovoltaics; thin-films; tin sulfide
Year: 2016 PMID: 27494110 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b07198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229