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Large band bending at SnS interface opens door for highly efficient thin-film solar cells
by Staff Writers
Sendai, Japan (SPX) Dec 05, 2022

A conceptual image of the analysis performed in this study: SnS is proved to be a promising photovoltaic (PV) material.

With the push towards carbon neutrality growing, and as a worrying trend of rising temperatures and natural disasters caused by global warming continues, solar cells will play a pivotal role in the world's transition to renewable energy.

Now, a research group has laid the path for achieving higher open-circuit voltage in tin sulfide (SnS) solar cells, thus realizing their latent potential as a thin-film solar material.

Thin-film solar cells, which comprise compound semiconductors with strong light absorption, require less raw materials, making them lighter and cheaper to produce.

SnS is one such thin-film solar cell material with environmentally friendly credentials, since it contains no rare or toxic elements. Yet, in recent years, researchers have begun to question this premise since, despite more than 20 years of research into them, their conversion efficiency had reached a mere 5% due to a low open-circuit voltage.

The group, which was led by Assistant Professor Issei Suzuki, from Tohoku University's Institute of Multidisciplinary Research for Advanced Materials, successfully demonstrated a SnS interface exhibiting large band bending - something necessary for obtaining a higher open-circuit voltage.

"We used photoelectron spectroscopy to analyze the electronic structure of the interface where molybdenum oxide was deposited on a SnS single crystal," said Suzuki. "We confirmed that the interface state achieved a high open-circuit voltage."

This is not Suzuki's first breakthrough in SnS thin-film solar cells either. Back in December 2021, he led another group that produced the world's first n-type SnS thin film. This enabled homojunctions to be formed in thin films.

For the current research, the group also proposed a method for fabricating interfaces suitable for SnS thin-film solar cells, including reducing the sulfur deficiency in the SnS thin films and employing a homojunction structure in their n-type and p-type layers.

"In the near future, we hope to fabricate homojunction solar cells with high conversion efficiency," added Suzuki.

Details of the group's research were published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C.

For further information on the previous success in developing n-type SnS thin films, see here.

Research Report:Avoiding Fermi Level Pinning at the SnS Interface for High Open-Circuit Voltage


Related Links
Tohoku University
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SOLAR DAILY
US green plan should be 'wake-up call' for EU industry: French minister
Washington (AFP) Dec 2, 2022
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire on Friday said Washington's $430 billion plan to spur climate-friendly technologies in the United States must be seen as a wake-up call for Europe. The EU "must be able to sweep in front of our own door" before worrying about the effects of the US climate plan on European industry, Le Maire told AFP in Washington, where he was part of French President Emmanuel Macron's US state visit. Even though the EU has already "changed its approach" on promoting green ... read more

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