Stability of Single and Tandem Junction A-Si:H Solar Cells Grown using the ECR Process

1997 ◽  
Vol 467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikram L. Dalal ◽  
Tim Maxson ◽  
Robert Girvan ◽  
Sohail Haroon

ABSTRACTWe report on the fabrication and stability tests of single junction a-Si:H, and tandem junction a-Si:H/a-Si:H solar cells using the ECR process under high hydrogen dilution (H-ECR process). We show that devices with high fill factors can be made using the H-ECR process. We also report on the stability studies of the solar cells under 1 and 2-sun illumination conditions. The solar cells show very little degradation even after 500 hours of illumination under 2 x sunlight illumination.

1998 ◽  
Vol 507 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaki Shima ◽  
Masao Isomura ◽  
Eiji Maruyama ◽  
Shingo Okamoto ◽  
Hisao Haku ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe world's highest stabilized efficiency of 9.5% (light-soaked and measured by the Japan Quality Assurance Organization (JQA)) for an a-Si/a-SiGe superstrate-type solar cell submodule (area: 1200 cm2) has been achieved. This value was obtained by investigating the effects of very-high hydrogen dilution of up to 54:1 (= H2: SiH4) on hydrogenated amorphous silicon germanium (a-SiGe:H) deposition at a low substrate temperature (Ts). It was found that deterioration of the film properties of a-SiGe:H when Ts decreases under low hydrogen dilution conditions can be suppressed by the high hydrogen dilution. This finding probably indicates that the energy provided by hydrogen radicals substitutes for the lost energy caused by the decrease in Ts and that sufficient surface reactions can occur. In addition, results from an estimation of the hydrogen and germanium contents of a-SiGe:H suggest the occurrence of some kinds of structural variations by the high hydrogen dilution. A guideline for optimization of a-SiGe:H films for solar cells can be presented on the basis of the experimental results. The possibility of a-SiGe:H as a narrow gap material for a-Si stacked solar cells in contrast with microcrystalline silicon (μ c-Si:H) will also be discussed from various standpoints. At present, a-SiGe:H is considered to have an advantage over μ1 c-Si:H.


2004 ◽  
Vol 808 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Anna Selvan ◽  
Yuan-Min Li ◽  
Liwei Li ◽  
Alan E. Delahoy

ABSTRACTDilution by Ar of silane plasma has been reported to increase the stability of a-Si:H films. A critical question is whether Ar diluted i-layers offer higher stabilized solar cell efficiencies than the conventional hydrogen dilution method. We have fabricated a-Si:H p-i-n solar cells with RF-PECVD i-layers by Ar dilution of silane. Ar dilution ratio (ADR, Ar/SiH4), RF power,pressure, and i-layer thickness were varied. At low ADR < 20, such solar cells show comparable initial efficiencies and stability as those devices having H2-diluted i-layers of similar thickness. For cells made with ADR > 20, the initial efficiency decreases dramatically with further increase in Ar dilution, and light soaking causes only mild changes in efficiencies. The stabilized efficiencies of cells made with high ADR are inferior to the cells produced with low ADR or cells prepared by H2 dilution. Further, Voc of solar cells made with high ADR (> 50) decreases substantially in ambient, indicating a porous microstructure susceptible to oxidation. While thermal annealing improves the Voc, a full recovery of Voc is made by accelerated light soaking.The combination of high power and high ADR can lead to nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) growth, although nucleation is much more difficult to attain by the Ar dilution method compared to hydrogen dilution. We have succeeded in fabricating p-i-n solar cells with nc-Si:H i-layers prepared by the Ar dilution approach. The double dilution by Ar and hydrogen of silane (Ar+H2+SiH4) can result in nc-Si:H i-layers with enhanced long wavelength spectral response compared to devices incorporating nc-Si:H i-layers grown by H2 dilution only. The nc-Si:H solar cells with Ar+H2 diluted i-layers exhibit no light-induced degradation.Using energetic Ar-rich plasma, in a process much simpler than the traditional nc-Si:H technique, doped a-Si:H thin layers can be prepared to form excellent tunnel junctions for multi-junction solar cells. We demonstrate such a novel, non-contaminating tunnel junction in tandem a-Si/a-Si and a-Si/nc-Si solar cells entirely fabricated in a single-chamber RF-PECVD system.


2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 1128-1137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guozhen Yue ◽  
Baojie Yan ◽  
Gautam Ganguly ◽  
Jeffrey Yang ◽  
Subhendu Guha

Light-induced metastability in hydrogenated nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si:H) single-junction solar cells was studied systematically. First, we observed no light-induced degradation when the photon energy was lower than the band gap of the amorphous phase; degradation occurred when the energy was higher than the band gap in the amorphous phase. The light-induced degradation could be annealed away at an elevated temperature. We concluded that the light-induced defect generation occurred mainly in the amorphous phase. Second, forward current injection did not degrade the nc-Si:H cell performance. However, a reverse bias during light soaking enhanced the degradation. Third, the nc-Si:H cells made with an optimized hydrogen dilution profile showed minimal degradation although these cells had a high amorphous volume fraction. This indicated that the amorphous volume fraction was not the only factor determining the degradation. Other factors also played important roles in the nc-Si:H stability.


2000 ◽  
Vol 77 (9) ◽  
pp. 699-704
Author(s):  
R Gharbi ◽  
M Fathallah ◽  
C F Pirri ◽  
E Tresso ◽  
G Crovini ◽  
...  

a-SiC:H samples and solar cells were made by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) using a multichamber deposition system. The effect of light illumination on samples prepared with and without hydrogen dilution was studied. The phototransport properties of the samples prepared with high hydrogen dilution were more stable versus time of illumination than non diluted ones.The samples were inserted as an intrinsic layer in semitransparent solar cells. The performance of solar cells depends on the energy gap and thickness of the intrinsic layer. High hydrogen dilution may increase the energy gap and act to decrease the structure uniformity. The results show that open circuit voltage Voc decreases with light illumination and depends on the doped p+ layer quality and created defects in the intrinsic layer. PACS Nos.: 70, 72, 40


2008 ◽  
Vol 1066 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baojie Yan ◽  
Guozhen Yue ◽  
Yanfa Yan ◽  
Chun-Sheng Jiang ◽  
Charles W. Teplin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTWe present a systematic study on the correlation of hydrogen dilution profiles to structural properties materials and solar cell performance in nc-Si:H solar cells. We deposited nc-Si:H single-junction solar cells using a modified very high frequency (VHF) glow discharge technique on stainless steel substrates with various profiles of hydrogen dilution in the gas mixture during deposition. The material properties were characterized using Raman spectroscopy, X-TEM, AFM, and C-AFM. The solar cell performance correlates well with the material structures. Three major conclusions are made based on the characterization results. First, the optimized nc-Si:H material does not show an incubation layer, indicating that the seeding layer is well optimized and works as per design. Second, the nanocrystalline evolution is well controlled by hydrogen dilution profiling in which the hydrogen dilution ratio is dynamically reduced during the intrinsic layer deposition. Third, the best nc-Si:H single-junction solar cell was made using a proper hydrogen dilution profile, which caused a nanocrystalline distribution close to uniform throughout the thickness, but with a slightly inverse nanocrystalline evolution. We have used the optimized hydrogen dilution profiling and improved the nc-Si:H solar cell performance significantly. As a result, we have achieved an initial active-area cell efficiency of 9.2% with a nc-Si:H single-junction structure, and 15.4% with an a-Si:H/a-SiGe:H/nc-Si:H triple-junction solar cell structure.


2003 ◽  
Vol 762 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Vlahos ◽  
J. Deng ◽  
J.M. Pearce ◽  
R.J. Koval ◽  
G.M. Ferreira ◽  
...  

AbstractA study was carried out on hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) n-i-p (substrate) solar cell structures with p-a-SiC:H and highly diluted p-Si:H layers grown with different dilution ratios R=[H2]/[SiH4]. The contributions of the recombination at the p/i interfaces to the forward bias dark current characteristics were identified and quantified for the different cell structures. In both cell structures the role of the p/i interfaces was identified and it is found that the lowest p/i interface recombination is obtained with protocrystalline p-Si:H layers having no microcrystalline component. The results with p-Si:H layers are attributed not only to their properties but also to the subsurface modification of the intrinsic layer. Evidence is also presented that points to the beneficial effects of the high hydrogen dilution and power used in the deposition of these p-layers in creating the p/i interface regions. The limitations on 1 sun open circuit voltage (VOC) imposed by the p/i recombination present in all the cell structures is consistent with the mechanisms proposed by Deng et al.[1]. The results presented here also point to why the 1 sun VOC in protocrystalline p-Si:H solar cells is higher than that in p-a-SiC:H cells.


2010 ◽  
Vol 1245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruud E.I. Schropp ◽  
Jan Willem Schüttauf ◽  
Karine van der Werf

AbstractProtocrystalline silicon, which is a material that has enhanced medium range order (MRO), can be prepared by using high hydrogen dilution in PECVD, or, alternatively, using high atomic H production from pure silane in HWCVD. We show that this material can accommodate percentage-level concentrations of oxygen without deleterious effects. The advantage of protocrystalline SiO:H for application in multijunction solar cells is not only that it has an increased band gap, providing a better match with the solar spectrum, but also that the solar cells incorporating this material have a reduced temperature coefficient. Further, protocrystalline materials have a reduced susceptibility to light-induced defect creation. We present the unique result in the PV field that these oxygenated protocrystalline silicon solar cells have an efficiency temperature coefficient (TCE) that is virtually zero (TCE is between -0.08%/°C and 0.0/°C). It is thus beneficial to make this cell the current limiting cell in multibandgap cells, which will lead to improved annual energy yield.


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