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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(14): 17858-17866, 2023 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37000018

ABSTRACT

Cadmium selenide (CdSe) solar cells have proven to be a remarkable potential top cell for a silicon-based tandem application. However, the defects and short carrier lifetimes of CdSe thin films greatly limit the solar cell performance. In this work, a Te-doped strategy is proposed to passivate the Se vacancy defects and increase the carrier lifetime of the CdSe thin film. The theoretical calculation helps to reveal the mechanism of nonradiative recombination of the CdSe thin film in depth. After Te-doping, the calculated capture coefficient of CdSe can be reduced from 4.61 × 10-8 cm3 s-1 to 2.32 × 10-9 cm3 s-1. Meanwhile, the carrier lifetime of CdSe thin film is increased nearly 3-fold from 0.53 to 1.43 ns. Finally, the efficiency of the Cd(Se,Te) solar cell is improved to 4.11%, about a relative 36.5% improvement compared to the pure CdSe solar cell. Both theoretical calculations and experiments prove that Te can effectively passivate bulk defects and improve the carrier lifetime of CdSe thin films, deserving further exploration to improve solar cell performance.

2.
Adv Mater ; 35(24): e2211522, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36972712

ABSTRACT

Short-wave infrared detectors are increasingly important in the fields of autonomous driving, food safety, disease diagnosis, and scientific research. However, mature short-wave infrared cameras such as InGaAs have the disadvantage of complex heterogeneous integration with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) readout circuits, leading to high cost and low imaging resolution. Herein, a low-cost, high-performance, and high-stability Tex Se1- x short-wave infrared photodiode detector is reported. The Tex Se1- x thin film is fabricated through CMOS-compatible low-temperature evaporation and post-annealing process, showcasing the potential of direct integration on the readout circuit. The device demonstrates a broad-spectrum response of 300-1600 nm, a room-temperature specific detectivity of 1.0 × 1010 Jones, a -3 dB bandwidth up to 116 kHz, and a linear dynamic range of over 55 dB, achieving the fastest response among Te-based photodiode devices and a dark current density 7 orders of magnitude smaller than Te-based photoconductive and field-effect transistor devices. With a simple Si3 N4 packaging, the detector shows high electric stability and thermal stability, meeting the requirements for vehicular applications. Based on the optimized Tex Se1- x photodiode detector, the applications in material identification and masking imaging is demonstrated. This work paves a new way for CMOS-compatible infrared imaging chips.

3.
Front Optoelectron ; 15(1): 36, 2022 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36637622

ABSTRACT

Selenium (Se) element is a promising light-harvesting material for solar cells because of the large absorption coefficient and prominent photoconductivity. However, the efficiency of Se solar cells has been stagnated for a long time owing to the suboptimal bandgap (> 1.8 eV) and the lack of a proper electron transport layer. In this work, we tune the bandgap of the absorber to the optimal value of Shockley-Queisser limit (1.36 eV) by alloying 30% Te with 70% Se. Simultaneously, ZnO electron transport layer is selected because of the proper band alignment, and the mild reaction at ZnO/Se0.7Te0.3 interface guarantees a good-quality heterojunction. Finally, a superior efficiency of 1.85% is achieved on ZnO/Se0.7Te0.3 solar cells.

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