Data Associated with "Identifying Suitable Front Contacts for High-Efficiency Cd(Se,Te) Solar Cells on Space-Qualified Cover Glass"

This is data associated with the publication "Identifying Suitable Front Contacts for High-Efficiency Cd(Se,Te) Solar Cells on Space-Qualified Cover Glass" by Aesha P. Patel, Ryan Muzzio, Matthew R. Young, Robert Morrissey, Suresh Chaulagain, B. Edward Sartor, Prabodika N. Kaluarachchi, Christian Velez, Joshua A. Brown, Joel N. Duenow, Stephen Glynn, Michael J. Heben, Zhaoning Song, Nikolas J. Podraza, Adam B. Phillips, Randy J. Ellingson, Matthew O. Reese.  All data associated with each figure in the manuscript and supplementary should be available in this dataset.  A readme file is also included to provide some guidance.

Abstract: Deployment of photovoltaics in space requires devices that combine high-efficiency, low areal mass, and resilience to harsh environments. Historically, high-efficiency multijunction III–V materials have dominated space power systems; however, their high cost and limited manufacturing throughput motivate the exploration of scalable alternatives. While CdTe-based thin-film photovoltaics offer an attractive option, their performance on non-conventional substrates can suffer from front-contact instability under higher-temperature processing. Here, the role of front-contact chemistry in limiting cell performance is investigated using CdTe-based devices fabricated on 150 μm thick Ceria-doped space-qualified 0214 Corning glass. A matrix of four transparent conducting oxides (TCOs: CTO, AZO, ITO, IZO) combined with two n-type emitters (MZO, IGO) reveals chemical stability at the front interface—rather than absorber composition alone—governs recombination losses, voltage deficits, and device reproducibility. Chemically stable front-contact combinations suppress elemental diffusion and interfacial degradation, resulting in significantly improved carrier lifetimes and junction quality. These insights are validated through record-certified Cd(Se,Te) cell efficiencies of 18.4% under AM1.5G and 16.2% under AM0 illumination on ultra-thin glass. Beyond CdTe, this work provides a general framework for the rational selection of TCO/emitter interfaces in superstrate thin-film photovoltaics, including emerging technologies like metal halide perovskites, while enabling high-efficiency, lightweight photovoltaics for space applications.

 

1 Data Resource
Name Size Type Resource Description History
Data_from_all_figures 12 MB Archive This zip file should have raw data used to generate all figures as well as Igor and Origin files used to generate them.
Author Information
Aesha Patel, University of Toledo
Ryan Muzzio, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4669-9633
Matt Young, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5602-7697
Robert Morrissey, National Laboratory of the Rockies
Suresh Chaulagain, University of Toledo
Ed Sartor, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0001-6661-8645
Prabodika Kaluarachchi, University of Toledo
Christian Velez, National Laboratory of the Rockies
Josh Brown, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4542-9033
Joel Duenow, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0002-8457-4022
Stephen Glynn, National Laboratory of the Rockies
Michael Heben, University of Toledo
Zhaoning Song, University of Toledo
Nikolas Podraza, University of Toledo
Adam Philips, University of Toledo
Randy Ellingson, University of Toledo
Matthew Reese, National Laboratory of the Rockies, ORCID iD: 0000-0001-9927-5984
Cite This Dataset
Patel, Aesha, Ryan Muzzio, Matt Young, Robert Morrissey, Suresh Chaulagain, Ed Sartor, Prabodika Kaluarachchi, Christian Velez, Josh Brown, Joel Duenow, Stephen Glynn, Michael Heben, Zhaoning Song, Nikolas Podraza, Adam Philips, Randy Ellingson, and Matthew Reese. 2026. "Data Associated with "Identifying Suitable Front Contacts for High-Efficiency Cd(Se,Te) Solar Cells on Space-Qualified Cover Glass"." NLR Data Catalog. Golden, CO: National Laboratory of the Rockies. Last updated: May 28, 2026. DOI: 10.7799/3365454.
About This Dataset
327
10.7799/3365454
NLR/JA-5K00-100636
Public
05/28/2026
DOE Project
CdTe Photovoltaics Accelerator and Consortium Management, CdTe PV Research and Development Core Project
Facilities
Materials & Chemical Science & Technology (MCS)
Funding Organization
Department of Energy (DOE)
Sponsoring Organization
USDOE Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI)
Research Areas
Materials Science
Solar Power
License
View License
Digital Object Identifier
10.7799/3365454