Abstract
In this work, a detailed description of the various steps involved in the fabrication of high-efficiency hydrogenated amorphous-silicon cells using plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition, and a novel shadow masking technique is presented. The influence of the different masking methods on the cell parameters was experimentally investigated. Particularly, the short-circuit current density (Jsc), the fill factor, the open circuit voltage (Voc), and the resistive losses indicated by the shunt (Rsh) and series (Rs) resistances were measured in order to assess the performance of the cells as a function of the masks used during the cell fabrication process. The results indicate that the use of a masking technique where the p-i-n structure was first deposited over the whole surface of a 20 cm2 × 20 cm2 substrate, followed by the deposition, deposits the back contact through a metal mask, and by the ultrasonic soldering of indium to access the front contact is a good alternative to laser scribing in the laboratory scale. Indeed, a record efficiency of 8.8%, with a short-circuit current density (Jsc) of 15.6 mA/cm2, an open-circuit voltage (Voc) of 0.8 V, and a fill factor of 66.07% and low resistive losses were obtained by this technique. Furthermore, a spectroscopic ellipsometry investigation of the uniformity of the film properties (thickness, band gap, and refractive index) on large-area substrates, which is crucial to mini-module fabrication on a single substrate and for heterojunction development, was performed using the optimal cell deposition recipes. It was found that the relative variations of the band gap, thickness, and refractive index n are less than 1% suggesting that the samples are uniform over the 20 cm2 × 20 cm2 substrate area used in this work.
Highlights
IntroductionHydrogenated amorphous-silicon (a-Si:H) is a very promising material which has drawn significant interest in several research fields, including in single-junction and tandem solar cells as an absorber, in silicon heterojunction cells as a passivation layer (Sai et al, 2018), in radiation detectors (Davis et al, 2020), optoelectronic and photonic devices (Chong et al, 2020), and as a photo-electrodes in water splitting powered by solar energy (Stuckelberger et al, 2017).Shadow-masking techniques can be considered as a low-cost pattern generation and thin-film device fabrication technique (Park et al, 2006) compared to laser scribing
A-Si:H solar cells fabricated by a classical masking method such as the hot-wire chemical vapor deposition technique showed an efficiency of only 6% (Nelson et al, 2001), which is much lower than the record of 10.3% obtained by solar cells deposited by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) (Lambertz et al, 2015)
One of the objectives of the present work was to develop, compare, and test an effective shadow masking method that may be a good alternative to laser scribing on lab-scale research for the development of high quality solar cells using PECVD and PVD deposition techniques
Summary
Hydrogenated amorphous-silicon (a-Si:H) is a very promising material which has drawn significant interest in several research fields, including in single-junction and tandem solar cells as an absorber, in silicon heterojunction cells as a passivation layer (Sai et al, 2018), in radiation detectors (Davis et al, 2020), optoelectronic and photonic devices (Chong et al, 2020), and as a photo-electrodes in water splitting powered by solar energy (Stuckelberger et al, 2017).Shadow-masking techniques can be considered as a low-cost pattern generation and thin-film device fabrication technique (Park et al, 2006) compared to laser scribing. A-Si:H solar cells fabricated by a classical masking method such as the hot-wire chemical vapor deposition technique showed an efficiency of only 6% (Nelson et al, 2001), which is much lower than the record of 10.3% obtained by solar cells deposited by PECVD (Lambertz et al, 2015). This record efficiency was obtained using the laser scribing technique, and the cell parameters were Voc of 0.89 V, Jsc of 17.20 mA/cm, and a FF of 67.0% (Lambertz et al, 2015). Further improvement of the performance of solar cells obtained by the masking technique is still possible
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