Publication | Open Access
Performance potential of low-defect density silicon thin-film solar cells obtained by electron beam evaporation and laser crystallisation
16
Citations
13
References
2013
Year
EngineeringPerformance PotentialSilicon On InsulatorPhotovoltaicsElectron Beam EvaporationPulsed Laser DepositionThin Film ProcessingMaterials ScienceLaser CrystallisationElectrical EngineeringFew MicronsOptical CeramicLaser-assisted DepositionMicroelectronicsDielectric Intermediate LayerApplied PhysicsSilicon FilmsSolar CellsOptoelectronics
A few microns thick silicon films on glass coated with a dielectric intermediate layer can be crystallised by a single pass of a line-focused diode laser beam. Under favorable process conditions relatively large linear grains with low defect density are formed. Most grain boundaries are defect-free low-energy twin-boundaries. Boron-doped laser crystallised films are processed into solar cells by diffusing an emitter from a phosphorous spin-on-dopant source, measuring up to 539 mV open-circuit voltage prior to metallisation. After applying a point-contact metallisation the best cell achieves 7.8% energy conversion efficiency, open-circuit voltage of 526 mV and short-circuit current of 26 mA/cm2. The efficiency is significantly limited by a low fill-factor of 56% due to the simplified metallisation approach. The internal quantum efficiency of laser crystallised cells is consistent with low front surface recombination. By improving cell metallisation and enhancing light-trapping the efficiencies of above 13% can be achieved.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1