Abstract

The electronic properties of hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) were studied using drive-level capacitance profiling (DLCP) to obtain defect density profiles as well as transient photocapacitance (TPC) and transient photocurrent (TPI) spectroscopies to study the spectra of defect related optical transitions. These measurements were performed on a series of n–i–p solar cell devices with intrinsic layer thickness of roughly 1μm. The nc-Si:H intrinsic layers were deposited using RF or MVHF glow discharge with various hydrogen dilution profiles predominantly on specular stainless steel substrates (SS/n+/i nc-Si:H/p+/ITO), but also on textured back reflectors (SS/Ag/ZnO/n+/i nc-Si:H/p+/ITO) in some cases. Crystallite fractions were estimated using Raman spectroscopy. The electronic properties determined by our measurements could be correlated with variations in structural device parameters and with the degree of hydrogen dilution profiling during growth. We also found, depending on the growth conditions, that the devices exhibited markedly different behaviors after prolonged light exposure (100h using light at 610nm and 500mW/cm2 intensity). We discuss one specific microscopic mechanism that may be responsible for the light-induced changes that we have observed.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call