open access publication

Preprint, 2024

Phosphosulfide semiconductors for optoelectronics and solar energy conversion

ChemRxiv, ISSN 2573-2293, 10.26434/chemrxiv-2024-pr17h-v2

Contributors

Mittmann, Lena Angelika 0000-0001-6241-4303 [1] Crovetto, Andrea 0000-0003-1499-8740 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Technical University of Denmark
  2. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Inorganic phosphosulfides – materials containing phosphorus, sulfur, and at least one metal – are a vast and chemically-versatile family of materials. Benefiting from a wide range of possible phosphorus oxidation states, phosphosulfide semiconductors exist as thiophosphate compounds with various types of P-S polyanions, as genuine multi-anion compounds with or without P-P bonds, as solid solutions, and as many intermediate cases. Since metal phosphides and metal sulfides are among the highest-performing optoelectronic semiconductors, it seems reasonable to consider the phosphosulfide family as a potential pool of materials for solar cells, photoelectrochemical cells, and light-emitting diodes. Nevertheless, phosphosulfide semiconductors have very rarely been characterized with these applications in mind. In this Perspective, we reflect on the potential applicability of known and hypothetical phosphosulfides as light absorbers and emitters in optoelectronic devices. First, we distill the existing knowledge accessible through the Materials Project database, finding promising phosphosulfides among the compounds already present in the database, and identifying what we see as the general advantages and challenges of phosphosulfides as optoelectronic materials. Then, we propose three concrete research directions aimed at finding novel high-quality phosphosulfide semiconductors with high light absorption coefficients, high carrier mobilities, and long carrier lifetimes. In particular, we argue that the versatility of phosphorus in this class of materials could potentially be exploited to engineer defect tolerance. Finally, we devise and describe a custom synthesis setup dedicated to high-throughput exploration of thin-film phosphosulfides.

Keywords

Materials Project database, P-P, P-P bond, P-S, Project database, absorber, absorption coefficient, applications, bonds, carrier lifetime, carrier mobility, cases, cells, challenges, coefficient, compounds, conversion, customers, database, defect tolerance, defects, devices, diodes, direction, emitter, energy conversion, family, high carrier mobility, high light absorption coefficient, high-throughput exploration, intermediate case, knowledge, lifetime, light absorbance, light absorption coefficient, light-emitting diodes, long carrier lifetime, materials, metal, metal phosphides, metal sulfides, mobility, optoelectronic devices, optoelectronic materials, optoelectronic semiconductors, optoelectronics, oxidation state, perspective, phosphide, phosphorus, phosphorus oxidation state, phosphosulfide, photoelectrochemical cells, polyanions, pool, pool of materials, potential applications, research directions, semiconductor, setup, solar cells, solar energy conversion, solid solution, solution, state, sulfide, sulfur, synthesis setup, thiophosphate, thiophosphate compounds, tolerance, versatility

Funders

  • European Research Council
  • The Velux Foundations

Data Provider: Digital Science