Abstract

About 10% efficient antimony selenosulfide (Sb2 (S,Se)3 ) solar cell isrealized by using selenourea as a hydrothermal raw material to prepare absorber layers. However, tailoring the bandgap of hydrothermal-based Sb2 (S,Se)3 film to the ideal bandgap (1.3-1.4eV) using the selenourea for optimal efficiency is still a challenge. Moreover, the expensive selenourea dramatically increases the fabricating cost. Here, a straightforward one-step hydrothermal method is developed to prepare high-quality Sb2 (S,Se)3 films using a novel precursor sodium selenosulfate as the selenium source. By tuning the Se/(Se+S) ratio in the hydrothermal precursor solution, a series of high-quality Sb2 (S,Se)3 films with reduced density of deep defect states and tunable bandgap from 1.31 to 1.71eV is successfully prepared. Consequently, the best efficiency of 10.05% with a high current density of 26.01 mA cm-2 is achieved in 1.35eV Sb2 (S,Se)3 solar cells. Compared with the traditional method using selenourea, the production cost for the Sb2 (S,Se)3 devicesis reduced by over 80%. In addition, the device exhibits outstanding stability, maintaining more than 93% of the initial power conversion efficiency after 30 days of exposure in the atmosphere without encapsulation. The present work definitely paves a facile and effective way to develop low-cost and high-efficiency chalcogenide-based photovoltaic devices.

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