Abstract

Nanostructured metal back reflectors (BRs) are playing an important role in thin-film solar cells, which facilitates an increased optical path length within a relatively thin absorbing layer. In this study, three nanotextured plasmonic metal (copper, gold, and silver) BRs underneath flexible thin-film amorphous silicon solar cells are systematically investigated. The solar cells with BRs demonstrate an excellent light harvesting capability in the long-wavelength region. With the combination of hybrid cavity resonances, horizontal modes, and surface plasmonic resonances, more incident light is coupled into the photoactive layer. Compared to the reference cells, the three devices with plasmonic BRs show lower parasitic absorptions with different individual absorption distributions. Both experimental and simulated results indicate that the silver BR cells delivered the best performance with a promising power conversion efficiency of 7.26%. These rational designs of light harvesting nanostructures provide guidelines for high-performance thin-film solar cells and other optoelectronic devices.

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