Issue 3, 2015

Ferroelectric materials for solar energy conversion: photoferroics revisited

Abstract

The application of ferroelectric materials (i.e. solids that exhibit spontaneous electric polarisation) in solar cells has a long and controversial history. This includes the first observations of the anomalous photovoltaic effect (APE) and the bulk photovoltaic effect (BPE). The recent successful application of inorganic and hybrid perovskite structured materials (e.g. BiFeO3, CsSnI3, CH3NH3PbI3) in solar cells emphasises that polar semiconductors can be used in conventional photovoltaic architectures. We review developments in this field, with a particular emphasis on the materials known to display the APE/BPE (e.g. ZnS, CdTe, SbSI), and the theoretical explanation. Critical analysis is complemented with first-principles calculation of the underlying electronic structure. In addition to discussing the implications of a ferroelectric absorber layer, and the solid state theory of polarisation (Berry phase analysis), design principles and opportunities for high-efficiency ferroelectric photovoltaics are presented.

Graphical abstract: Ferroelectric materials for solar energy conversion: photoferroics revisited

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
06 Nov 2014
Accepted
22 Dec 2014
First published
22 Dec 2014
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2015,8, 838-848

Ferroelectric materials for solar energy conversion: photoferroics revisited

K. T. Butler, J. M. Frost and A. Walsh, Energy Environ. Sci., 2015, 8, 838 DOI: 10.1039/C4EE03523B

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