The efficiency of earth‐abundant Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4 (CZTSSe) solar cells is considerably lower than the Shockley–Queisser limit. One of the main reasons for this is the presence of deleterious cation disordering caused… Click to show full abstract
The efficiency of earth‐abundant Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4 (CZTSSe) solar cells is considerably lower than the Shockley–Queisser limit. One of the main reasons for this is the presence of deleterious cation disordering caused by SnZn antisite and 2CuZn+SnZn defect clusters, resulting in a short minority carrier lifetime and significant band tailing, leading to a large open‐circuit voltage deficit, and hence, low efficiency. In this study, Ga‐doping is used to increase the CZTSSe solar cell efficiency to as high as 12.3%, one of the highest for this type of cells. First‐principles calculations show that the preference of Ga3+ occupying Zn and Sn sites has a benign effect on suppressing the formation of the SnZn deep donor defects by upwardly shifting the Fermi level, which is further confirmed by deep‐level transient spectroscopy characterization. Besides, the Ga dopants can also form defect‐dopant clusters, such as GaZn+CuZn and GaZn+GaSn, which also have positive effects on suppressing the band‐tailing states. The defect engineering via Ga3+‐doping may suppress the band‐tailing defect with a decreased Urbach energy, elevate the minority carrier lifetime, and in the end, enhance the VOC from 473 to 515 mV. These results provide a new route to further increase CZTSSe‐based solar cell efficiency by defect engineering.
               
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