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Ultrafast self-trapping of photoexcited carriers sets the upper limit on antimony trisulfide photovoltaic devices.

Zhaoliang YangXiaomin WangYuzhong ChenZhenfa ZhengZeng ChenWenqi XuWeimin LiuYang Michael YangJin ZhaoTao ChenHaiming Zhu
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Antimony trisulfide (Sb2S3) is considered to be a promising photovoltaic material; however, the performance is yet to be satisfactory. Poor power conversion efficiency and large open circuit voltage loss have been usually ascribed to interface and bulk extrinsic defects By performing a spectroscopy study on Sb2S3 polycrystalline films and single crystal, we show commonly existed characteristics including redshifted photoluminescence with 0.6 eV Stokes shift, and a few picosecond carrier trapping without saturation at carrier density as high as approximately 1020 cm-3. These features, together with polarized trap emission from Sb2S3 single crystal, strongly suggest that photoexcited carriers in Sb2S3 are intrinsically self-trapped by lattice deformation, instead of by extrinsic defects. The proposed self-trapping explains spectroscopic results and rationalizes the large open circuit voltage loss and near-unity carrier collection efficiency in Sb2S3 thin film solar cells. Self-trapping sets the upper limit on maximum open circuit voltage (approximately 0.8 V) and thus power conversion efficiency (approximately 16 %) for Sb2S3 solar cells.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • minimally invasive
  • solid state
  • quantum dots
  • room temperature
  • mass spectrometry