Abstract

Passivated emitter and rear cell (PERC) solar cells have dominated the photovoltaic market in recent years. Continuously improving the efficiency of PERC solar cells is of great importance to enable the goal of low electricity cost, which is cheaper than the cost of thermal power generation. Herein, it is demonstrated that a two‐step postfiring bias treatment is able to evidently enhance the efficiency of commercial gallium‐doped PERC solar cells by up to 0.1% absolute. In detail, the first‐step bias treatment is done by forward biasing the PERC solar cells at 12 A and 200 °C for 60 min, resulting in an average efficiency enhancement at around 0.05% absolute. The second‐step bias treatment is done by reverse biasing the PERC solar cells at −0.1 or −0.2 V and at the elevated temperatures for certain times, leading to another average efficiency enhancement at around 0.05% absolute. To explore the mechanism underlying the two‐step bias treatments on improving cell efficiency, a new model in light of hydrogen behavior under electric field is proposed to explain this phenomenon.

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