Bandgap engineering of Cu2CdxZn1−xSnS4 alloy for photovoltaic applications: A complementary experimental and first-principles study

Zhenyu Xiao(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Yongfeng Li(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Bin Yao(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Rui Deng(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Zhanhui Ding(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Tom Wu(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Gang Yang(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Chunran Li(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Zi-Yuan Dong(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Lei Liu(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Ligong Zhang(Changchun University of Science and Technology), Haifeng Zhao(Changchun University of Science and Technology)
Journal of Applied Physics
November 11, 2013
Cited by 106

Abstract

We report on bandgap engineering of an emerging photovoltaic material of Cu2CdxZn1−xSnS4 (CCZTS) alloy. CCZTS alloy thin films with different Cd contents and single kesterite phase were fabricated using the sol-gel method. The optical absorption measurements indicate that the bandgap of the kesterite CCZTS alloy can be continuously tuned in a range of 1.55–1.09 eV as Cd content varied from x = 0 to 1. Hall effect measurements suggest that the hole concentration of CCZTS films decreases with increasing Cd content. The CCZTS-based solar cell with x = 0.47 demonstrates a power conversion efficiency of 1.2%. Our first-principles calculations based on the hybrid functional method demonstrate that the bandgap of the kesterite CCZTS alloy decreases monotonically with increasing Cd content, supporting the experimental results. Furthermore, Cu2ZnSnS4/Cu2CdSnS4 interface has a type-I band-alignment with a small valence-band offset, explaining the narrowing of the bandgap of CCZTS as the Cd content increases. Our results suggest that CCZTS alloy is a potentially suitable material to fabricate high-efficiency multi-junction tandem solar cells with different bandgap-tailored absorption layers.


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