36 research outputs found

    Laserkristallisierte multikristalline Silicium-DĂŒnnschicht-Solarzellen auf Glas

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    ï»żIn this thesis, laser-crystallized multicrystalline silicon thin-film solar cells on glass are developed. The laser crystallization provides a unique crystal quality. The objectives of this study are to extend the physical understanding of this type of solar cell and to improve the photovoltaic properties. Therefor the layer and process parameters are analyzed and optimized. This work presents results for the (1) layered laser crystallization of the absorber, (2) reduction of the seed layer thickness, (3) introduction of a barrier layer, (4) laser-based preparation of the emitter, (5) texturing of the substrate surface, (6) contacting of the solar cells, (7) rapid thermal annealing and hydrogen passivation. The IV parameters of only 2 ”m thin solar cells achieve open-circuit voltages up to 517 mV, short-circuit current densities up to 20.3 mA/cm2, fill factors up to 72% and efficiencies up to 4.2%.Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit werden laserkristallisierte multikristalline Silicium-DĂŒnnschicht-Solarzellen auf Glas weiterentwickelt. Die Laserkristallisation ermöglicht eine weltweit einzigartige KristallqualitĂ€t. Die Ziele der vorliegenden Arbeit sind, das physikalische VerstĂ€ndnis dieses Solarzellentyps zu erweitern und die photovoltaischen Eigenschaften zu verbessern. DafĂŒr werden die Schicht- und Prozessparameter untersucht und optimiert. PrĂ€sentiert werden Ergebnisse zur (1) schichtweisen Laserkristallisation des Absorbers, (2) Verringerung der Keimschichtdicke, (3) EinfĂŒhrung einer Barriereschicht, (4) laserbasierten Herstellung der Emitter, (5) Strukturierung der SubstratoberflĂ€che, (6) Kontaktierung der Solarzellen, (7) schnelle thermische Ausheilung und Wasserstoff-Passivierung. Die I-V-Parameter von nur 2 ”m dĂŒnnen Solarzellen erreichen Leerlaufspannungen bis 517 mV, Kurzschlussstromdichten bis 20,3 mA/cm2, FĂŒllfaktoren bis 72% und Wirkungsgrade bis 4,2%

    Carrier Lifetime in Liquid-phase Crystallized Silicon on Glass

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    Liquid-phase crystallized silicon on glass (LPCSG) presents a promising material to fabricate high quality silicon thin films, e.g. for solar cells and modules. Barrier layers and a doped amorphous silicon layer are deposited on the glass substrate followed by crystallization with a line focus laser beam. In this paper we introduce injection level dependent lifetime measurements generated by the quasi steady-state photoconductance decay method (QSSPC) to characterize LPCSG absorbers. This contactless method allows a determination of the LPCSG absorber quality already at an early stage of solar cell fabrication, and provides a monitoring of the absorber quality during the solar cell fabrication steps. We found minority carrier lifetimes higher than 200ns in our layers (e.g. n-type absorber with ND=2x1015cm-3) indicating a surface recombination velocity SBL<3000cm/s at the barrier layer/Si interface

    Biomimic Vein-Like Transparent Conducting Electrodes with Low Sheet Resistance and Metal Consumption

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    Abstract: In this contribution, inspired by the excellent resource management and material transport function of leaf veins, the electrical transport function of metallized leaf veins is mimicked from the material transport function of the vein networks. By electroless copper plating on real leaf vein networks with copper thickness of only several hundred nanometre up to several micrometre, certain leaf veins can be converted to transparent conductive electrodes with an ultralow sheet resistance 100 times lower than that of state-of-the-art indium tin oxide thin films, combined with a broadband optical transmission of above 80% in the UV–VIS–IR range. Additionally, the resource efficiency of the vein-like electrode is characterized by the small amount of material needed to build up the networks and the low copper consumption during metallization. In particular, the high current density transport capability of the electrode of > 6000 A cm−2 was demonstrated. These superior properties of the vein-like structures inspire the design of high-performance transparent conductive electrodes without using critical materials and may significantly reduce the Ag consumption down to < 10% of the current level for mass production of solar cells and will contribute greatly to the electrode for high power density concentrator solar cells, high power density Li-ion batteries, and supercapacitors.[Figure not available: see fulltext.]. © 2020, © 2020, The Author(s)

    Non-destructive depth reconstruction of Al-Al2_2Cu layer structure with nanometer resolution using extreme ultraviolet coherence tomography

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    Non-destructive cross-sectional characterization of materials systems with a resolution in the nanometer range and the ability to allow for time-resolved in-situ studies is of great importance in material science. Here, we present such a measurements method, extreme ultraviolet coherence tomography (XCT). The method is non-destructive during sample preparation as well as during the measurement, which is distinguished by a negligible thermal load as compared to electron microscopy methods. Laser-generated radiation in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and soft x-ray range is used for characterization. The measurement principle is interferometric and the signal evaluation is performed via an iterative Fourier analysis. The method is demonstrated on the metallic material system Al-Al2_2Cu and compared to electron and atomic force microscopy measurements. We also present advanced reconstruction methods for XCT which even allow for the determination of the roughness of outer and inner interfaces.Comment: First two authors contributed equally to this work and are ordered alphabetically. 14 page

    Multicrystalline silicon thin-film solar cells based on vanadium oxide heterojunction and laser-doped contacts

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    This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: MartĂ­n, I., LĂłpez, G., Plentz, J., Jin, C., Ortega, P., Voz, C., Puigdollers, J., Gawlik, A., Jia, G. and AndrĂ€, G. (2019), Multicrystalline Silicon Thin‐Film Solar Cells Based on Vanadium Oxide Heterojunction and Laser‐Doped Contacts. Phys. Status Solidi A, 216: 1900393, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/pssa.201900393. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving.Liquid phase crystallized (LPC) silicon thin films on glass substrates are a feasible alternative to conventional crystalline silicon (c-Si) wafers for solar cells. Due to substrate limitation, a low-temperature technology is needed for solar cell fabrication. While silicon heterojunction is typically used, herein, the combination of vanadium oxide/c-Si heterojunction as emitter and base contacts defined by IR laser processing of phosphorus-doped amorphous silicon carbide stacks is explored. LPC solar cells are fabricated using such technologies to identify their issues and advantages with a promising performance of an active-area efficiency of 5.6%. Apart from the absence of light-trapping techniques, the relatively low efficiency obtained is attributed to a low lifetime in the LPC silicon bulk. These poor material properties imply a short diffusion length that makes it that only photogenerated carriers in the emitter regions can be collected. Consequently, future devices should show narrower base contact regions, suggesting a shorter-wavelength laser, combined with longer LPC substrate lifetimes.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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