All-Inorganic Hydrothermally Processed Semitransparent Sb 2 S 3 Solar Cells with CuSCN as the Hole Transport Layer.
Pankaj KumarMartin ErikssonDzmitry S KharytonauShujie YouMarta Maria NatileAlberto VomieroPublished in: ACS applied energy materials (2024)
An inorganic wide-bandgap hole transport layer (HTL), copper(I) thiocyanate (CuSCN), is employed in inorganic planar hydrothermally deposited Sb 2 S 3 solar cells. With excellent hole transport properties and uniform compact morphology, the solution-processed CuSCN layer suppresses the leakage current and improves charge selectivity in an n-i-p-type solar cell structure. The device without the HTL (FTO/CdS/Sb 2 S 3 /Au) delivers a modest power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 1.54%, which increases to 2.46% with the introduction of CuSCN (FTO/CdS/Sb 2 S 3 /CuSCN/Au). This PCE is a significant improvement compared with the previous reports of planar Sb 2 S 3 solar cells employing CuSCN. CuSCN is therefore a promising alternative to expensive and inherently unstable organic HTLs. In addition, CuSCN makes an excellent optically transparent (with average transmittance >90% in the visible region) and shunt-blocking HTL layer in pinhole-prone ultrathin (<100 nm) semitransparent absorber layers grown by green and facile hydrothermal deposition. A semitransparent device is fabricated using an ultrathin Au layer (∼10 nm) with a PCE of 2.13% and an average visible transmittance of 13.7%.