Publication | Open Access
Mitigating Plasmonic Absorption Losses at Rear Electrodes in High‐Efficiency Silicon Solar Cells Using Dopant‐Free Contact Stacks
94
Citations
37
References
2019
Year
EngineeringPlasmonic AbsorptionSemiconductor MaterialsConventional Crystalline SiliconOptoelectronic DevicesPhotovoltaic DevicesPlasmon-enhanced PhotovoltaicsPhotovoltaicsSemiconductorsElectronic DevicesSolar Cell StructuresCharge Carrier TransportZno FilmElectrical EngineeringOxide ElectronicsSemiconductor MaterialRear ElectrodesElectron Transport LayerPlasmonicsApplied PhysicsSolar CellsSolar Cell Materials
Abstract Although charge‐carrier selectivity in conventional crystalline silicon (c‐Si) solar cells is usually realized by doping Si, the presence of dopants imposes inherent performance limitations due to parasitic absorption and carrier recombination. The development of alternative carrier‐selective contacts, using non‐Si electron and hole transport layers, has the potential to overcome such drawbacks and simultaneously reduce the cost and/or simplify the fabrication process of c‐Si solar cells. Nevertheless, devices relying on such non‐Si contacts with power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) that rival their classical counterparts are yet to be demonstrated. In this study, one key element is brought forward toward this demonstration by incorporating low‐pressure chemical vapor deposited ZnO as the electron transport layer in c‐Si solar cells. Placed at the rear of the device, it is found that rather thick (75 nm) ZnO film capped with LiF x /Al simultaneously enables efficient electron selectivity and suppression of parasitic infrared absorption. Next, these electron‐selective contacts are integrated in c‐Si solar cells with MoO x ‐based hole‐collecting contacts at the device front to realize full‐area dopant‐free‐contact solar cells. In the proof‐of‐concept device, a PCE as high as 21.4% is demonstrated, which is a record for this novel device class and is at the level of conventional industrial solar cells.
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