Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4

Cation substitution has been extensively used to improve the fundamental optoelectronic properties and the photovoltaic performance of kesterite solar cells, and some of the most promising results have been obtained by substituting zinc with cadmium. Structurally, the positive effects of Cd have bee...

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Main Authors: Hadke, Shreyash, Chen, Wei, Tan, Joel Ming Rui, Guc, Maxim, Izquierdo-Roca, Victor, Rignanese, Gian-Marco, Hautier, Geoffroy, Wong, Lydia Helena
Other Authors: School of Materials Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146517
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-146517
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
Photovoltaics
CuZn
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Photovoltaics
CuZn
Hadke, Shreyash
Chen, Wei
Tan, Joel Ming Rui
Guc, Maxim
Izquierdo-Roca, Victor
Rignanese, Gian-Marco
Hautier, Geoffroy
Wong, Lydia Helena
Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
description Cation substitution has been extensively used to improve the fundamental optoelectronic properties and the photovoltaic performance of kesterite solar cells, and some of the most promising results have been obtained by substituting zinc with cadmium. Structurally, the positive effects of Cd have been attributed to the expected increase in the formation energy of defects such as CuZn + ZnCu due to the larger ionic radius of Cd2+ as compared to Zn2+. However, ab initio calculations using density functional theory (DFT) showed similar formation energies for CuZn + ZnCu in Cu2ZnSnS4 and CuCd + CdCu in Cu2CdSnS4. Further, in this report, it is shown that Cd does not directly substitute the zinc lattice sites (2d Wyckoff positions) in the Cu2ZnSnS4 structure, but rather, a two-way cation restructuring due to the continuous transformation of the structure from kesterite to stannite leads to Cu replacing Zn, and Cd occupying the Cu sites (2a Wyckoff positions) in the partially Cd-substituted Cu2Zn1−xCdxSnS4. Hence, the structural reasons for the beneficial effects of Cd need to be reinterpreted. Here, using computational model based on cluster expansion (fitted on DFT data), Monte-Carlo simulations, and differential scanning calorimetry, it is shown that Cu2CdSnS4 has less structural disorder than Cu2ZnSnS4 even if the thermodynamic point defect formation energy calculated using diluted point-defect models for disorder-inducing CuZn + ZnCu and CuCd + CdCu defects in these two materials is predicted to be similar. This difference in the structural disorder is due to a sharp order-disorder transformation in Cu2ZnSnS4 at about 530 K, and a continuous order-disorder transformation in Cu2CdSnS4 throughout the range of processing temperatures.
author2 School of Materials Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science and Engineering
Hadke, Shreyash
Chen, Wei
Tan, Joel Ming Rui
Guc, Maxim
Izquierdo-Roca, Victor
Rignanese, Gian-Marco
Hautier, Geoffroy
Wong, Lydia Helena
format Article
author Hadke, Shreyash
Chen, Wei
Tan, Joel Ming Rui
Guc, Maxim
Izquierdo-Roca, Victor
Rignanese, Gian-Marco
Hautier, Geoffroy
Wong, Lydia Helena
author_sort Hadke, Shreyash
title Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
title_short Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
title_full Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
title_fullStr Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4
title_sort effect of cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in cu2(zn,cd)sns4
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146517
_version_ 1773551276251938816
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1465172023-07-14T16:02:17Z Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu2(Zn,Cd)SnS4 Hadke, Shreyash Chen, Wei Tan, Joel Ming Rui Guc, Maxim Izquierdo-Roca, Victor Rignanese, Gian-Marco Hautier, Geoffroy Wong, Lydia Helena School of Materials Science and Engineering Interdisciplinary Graduate School (IGS) Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N) Engineering::Materials Photovoltaics CuZn Cation substitution has been extensively used to improve the fundamental optoelectronic properties and the photovoltaic performance of kesterite solar cells, and some of the most promising results have been obtained by substituting zinc with cadmium. Structurally, the positive effects of Cd have been attributed to the expected increase in the formation energy of defects such as CuZn + ZnCu due to the larger ionic radius of Cd2+ as compared to Zn2+. However, ab initio calculations using density functional theory (DFT) showed similar formation energies for CuZn + ZnCu in Cu2ZnSnS4 and CuCd + CdCu in Cu2CdSnS4. Further, in this report, it is shown that Cd does not directly substitute the zinc lattice sites (2d Wyckoff positions) in the Cu2ZnSnS4 structure, but rather, a two-way cation restructuring due to the continuous transformation of the structure from kesterite to stannite leads to Cu replacing Zn, and Cd occupying the Cu sites (2a Wyckoff positions) in the partially Cd-substituted Cu2Zn1−xCdxSnS4. Hence, the structural reasons for the beneficial effects of Cd need to be reinterpreted. Here, using computational model based on cluster expansion (fitted on DFT data), Monte-Carlo simulations, and differential scanning calorimetry, it is shown that Cu2CdSnS4 has less structural disorder than Cu2ZnSnS4 even if the thermodynamic point defect formation energy calculated using diluted point-defect models for disorder-inducing CuZn + ZnCu and CuCd + CdCu defects in these two materials is predicted to be similar. This difference in the structural disorder is due to a sharp order-disorder transformation in Cu2ZnSnS4 at about 530 K, and a continuous order-disorder transformation in Cu2CdSnS4 throughout the range of processing temperatures. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Accepted version S. H., J. M. R. T., and L. W. acknowledge nancial support from National Research Foundation (NRF), Singapore, through the Nanomaterials for Energy and Water Management (SHARE NEW) CREATE programme, MOE Tier 2 (MOE2016-T2-1- 030S). W. C., G.-M. R., and G. H. acknowledge support from the F.R.S.-FNRS. W. C., G.-M. R., and G. H. acknowledge access to various computational resources: the Tier-1 supercomputer of the F´ed´eration Wallonie-Bruxelles funded by the Walloon Region (grant agreement No. 1117545), and all the facilities provided by the Universit´e catholique de Louvain (CISM/UCL) and by the Consortium des ´Equipements de Calcul Intensif en F´ed´eration Wallonie Bruxelles (C´ECI). M. G. and V. I acknowledge support by the H2020 Programme under the project INFINITE-CELL (H2020-MSCA-RISE-2017-777968), by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under the IGNITE (ENE2017-87671-C3-1-R), and by the European Regional Development Funds (ERDF, FEDER Programa Competitivitat de Catalunya 2007–2013). Authors from IREC belong to the SEMS (Solar Energy Materials and Systems) Consolidated Research Group of the “Generalitat de Catalunya” (Ref. 2017 SGR 862). 2021-02-23T05:15:15Z 2021-02-23T05:15:15Z 2019 Journal Article Hadke, S., Chen, W., Tan, J. M. R., Guc, M., Izquierdo-Roca, V., Rignanese, G.-M., ... Wong, L. H. (2019). Effect of Cd on cation redistribution and order-disorder transition in Cu 2 (Zn, Cd) SnS 4. Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 7(47), 26927-26933. doi:10.1039/C9TA09572A 2050-7496 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146517 10.1039/C9TA09572A 47 7 26927 26933 en Journal of Materials Chemistry A © 2019 Royal Society of Chemistry. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Journal of Materials Chemistry A and is made available with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry. application/pdf