Abstract

We studied the impact of oxidizing pre-treatments (OPT) and post deposition annealing (PDA) on the passivation performance and the hydrogen distribution near the interface between crystalline silicon (c-Si) and hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), the critical functional region in Si heterojunction solar cells. The OPT prior to deposition of the a-Si:H layer consists of immersing the c-Si substrates into hydrogen peroxide solutions, which forms a silicon oxide interlayer. Spectroscopic ellipsometry (SE) indicates that slightly thicker a-Si:H layers result from OPT. The refractive index and the extinction coefficient are increased by inserting the oxide interlayers, suggesting that less deficient and denser a-Si:H layers can be formed. Under optimum conditions, OPT leads to at least 2-fold improvement of the effective photo-generated carrier lifetime. PDA at 200 °C further improves the passivation performance of samples with an interlayer. Hydrogen profiling with nuclear reaction analysis clarifies that higher hydrogen concentrations are present around the heterointerfaces of samples with an interlayer and that these hydrogen concentrations are maintained after PDA. Our results suggest that the oxide interlayer can suppress hydrogen desorption in the initial growth stage of high-quality a-Si:H layers and during subsequent PDA, resulting in excellent passivation performance.

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