Abstract
Carrier-selective contact with low minority carrier recombination and efficient majority carrier transport is mandatory to eliminate metal-induced recombination for higher energy conversion efficiency for silicon (Si) solar cells. In the present study, the carrier-selective contact consists of an ultra-thin tunnel oxide and a phosphorus-doped polycrystalline Si (<em>poly</em>-Si) thin film formed by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) and subsequent thermal crystallization. It is shown that the <em>poly</em>-Si film properties (doping level, crystallization and dopant activation anneal temperature) are crucial for achieving excellent contact passivation quality. It is also demonstrated quantitatively that the tunnel oxide plays a critical role in this tunnel oxide passivated contact (TOPCON) scheme to realize desired carrier selectivity. Presence of tunnel oxide increases the implied <em>V<sub>oc</sub></em> (<em>iV<sub>oc</sub></em>) by ~ 125 mV. The <em>iV<sub>oc</sub></em> value as high as 728 mV is achieved on symmetric structure with TOPCON on both sides. Large area (239 cm<sup>2</sup>) <em>n</em>-type Czochralski (Cz) Si solar cells are fabricated with homogeneous implanted boron emitter and screen-printed contact on the front and TOPCON on the back, achieving 21.2% cell efficiency. Detailed analysis shows that the performance of these cells is mainly limited by boron emitter recombination on the front side.
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