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Purely Intrinsic Poly-silicon Films for n-i-p Solar Cells
53
Citations
13
References
1997
Year
EngineeringOrganic Solar CellPolycrystalline Silicon FilmsSemiconductor MaterialsOptoelectronic DevicesThin Film Process TechnologySilicon On InsulatorPhotovoltaicsIntrinsic Poly-silicon FilmsSemiconductorsHydrogen DilutionWire TemperatureThin Film ProcessingMaterials ScienceCrystalline DefectsSemiconductor MaterialElectronic MaterialsPerovskite Solar CellApplied PhysicsThin FilmsSolar CellsChemical Vapor DepositionSolar Cell Materials
Polycrystalline silicon films have been prepared by hot wire chemical vapor deposition (HWCVD) at a relatively low substrate temperature of 430° C at a high growth rate (>5 Å/s) by optimizing the hydrogen dilution of the silane feedstock gas, the gas pressure and the wire temperature. The optimized material has 95% crystalline volume fraction with complete coalescence of grains. The grains with an average size of 70 nm have a preferential orientation along the (220) direction. Large structures up to 0.5 µ m could be observed by atomic force microscopy (AFM). An activation energy of 0.54 eV for the electrical transport and a low carrier concentration (<10 11 cm -3 ) confirmed the intrinsic nature of the films. A white light photoconductivity of 1.9×10 -5 Ω -1 cm -1 , a high minority carrier diffusion length of 334 nm and a low (<10 17 cm -3 ) defect density ensure that the poly-Si:H films possess device quality. A very small temperature dependence of the Hall mobility (0.012 eV) indicates negligible barrier to carrier transport at the grain boundaries. A single junction n-i-p cell incorporating HWCVD poly-Si:H in the configuration n + -c-Si/i-poly-Si:H/p-µc-Si:H/ITO yielded 3.15% efficiency under 100 mW/cm 2 AM1.5 illumination and a current density of 18.2 mA/cm 2 was achieved for only 1.5 µ m thick i-layer.
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