Abstract

The aim of this paper is to demonstrate for the first time the feasibility of fabricating large-area screen-printed monocrystalline silicon solar cells using the Doped Oxide Solid Source (DOSS) diffusion technique. This process was applied to form the n +p emitter junction from highly doped sources prepared in a POCl 3 ambient. The diffusions were performed under a pure nitrogen flow in the temperature range 900–1050°C. In this investigation attention was devoted to the influence of the source doping level on the fill factor. The solar cells were fabricated on industrial quality 4-inch Cz wafers using a simple processing sequence incorporating screen-printed contacts and a TiO 2 antireflection coating deposited by spin-on. Fill factors as high as 79% were obtained. The potential benefit of retaining for passivation purposes the thin residual oxide grown during phosphorus diffusion was evaluated. These first experiments led to a cell efficiency close to 10%.

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