MRS Meetings and Events

 

EN01.10.03 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

A Phenomenological Figure of Merit for Photovoltaic Materials

When and Where

Apr 26, 2024
11:15am - 11:30am

Room 331, Level 3, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Andrea Crovetto1

Technical University of Denmark1

Abstract

Andrea Crovetto1

Technical University of Denmark1
I propose a figure of merit Γ<sub>PV</sub> to estimate the maximum efficiency attainable by a generic non-ideal PV absorber in a planar single-junction solar cell under the non-concentrated AM1.5G spectrum. This efficiency limit complements the more idealized limits derived from fundamental physics, such as the Shockley-Queisser limit and its subsequent generalizations. Specifically, the present figure-of-merit approach yields stricter efficiency limits applicable to realistic PV absorbers with various imperfections, including finite carrier mobilities and doping densities. Γ<sub>PV</sub> is a function of eight properties of the absorber that are both measurable by experiment and computable by electronic structure methods. They are: band gap, non-radiative carrier lifetime, carrier mobility, doping density, static dielectric constant, effective mass, and two parameters describing the spectral average and dispersion of the light absorption coefficient. Γ<sub>PV</sub> has high predictive power (absolute efficiency error less than ±1.1%) and wide applicability range. The Shockley-Queisser limit and its generalizations are reproduced by Γ<sub>PV</sub>. Simpler figures of merit proposed by others are also included as special cases of Γ<sub>PV</sub>.<br/><br/>For a generic PV absorber at any stage of development, determination of its Γ<sub>PV</sub> figure of merit helps understand whether imperfect PV performance is intrinsic to the material (inadequate bulk properties at the current stage of development), or if it “only” requires a different device structure, contact layers, or improved interface properties. I will show the outcome of this analysis for 25 PV absorbers with record PV efficiencies between 0% and 85% of their Shockley-Queisser limit. Using a local version of the Γ<sub>PV</sub> figure of merit, a material-specific optimization strategy is laid out for any experimentally synthesized PV absorber, by specifying the bulk properties that should most urgently be improved to increase their PV efficiency.

Symposium Organizers

Ardalan Armin, Swansea University
Christoph Brabec, FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg
Nicola Gasparini, Imperial College London
Ellen Moons, Karlstad University

Publishing Alliance

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