Understanding and Implementation of Hydrogen Passivation of Defects in String Ribbon Silicon for High-Efficiency, Manufacturable, Silicon Solar Cells

Abstract

Photovoltaics offers a unique solution to energy and environmental problems simultaneously. However, widespread application of photovoltaics will not be realized until costs are reduced by about a factor of four without sacrificing performance. Silicon crystallization and wafering account for about 55% of the photovoltaic module manufacturing cost, but can be reduced significantly if a ribbon silicon material, such as String Ribbon Si, is used as an alternative to cast Si. However, the growth of String Ribbon leads to a high density of electrically active bulk defects that limit the minority carrier lifetime and solar cell performance. The research tasks of this thesis focus on the understanding, development, and implementation of defect passivation techniques to increase the bulk carrier lifetime in String Ribbon Si in order to enhance solar cell efficiency. Hydrogen passivation of defects in Si can be performed during solar cell processing by utilizing the hydrogen available during plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) of SiNx:H films. It is shown in this thesis that hydrogen passivation of defects during the simultaneous anneal of a screen-printed Al layer on the back and a PECVD SiNx:H film increases the bulk lifetime in String Ribbon by more than 30 ?A three step physical model is proposed to explain the hydrogen defect passivation. Appropriate implementation of the Al-enhanced defect passivation treatment leads to String Ribbon solar cell efficiencies as high as 14.7%. Further enhancement of bulk lifetime up to 92 ?s achieved through in-situ NH3 plasma pretreatment and low-frequency (LF) plasma excitation during SiNx:H deposition followed by a rapid thermal anneal (RTA). Development of an optimized two-step RTA firing cycle for hydrogen passivation, the formation of an Al-doped back surface field, and screen-printed contact firing results in solar cell efficiencies as high as 15.6%. In the final task of this thesis, a rapid thermal treatment performed in a conveyer belt furnace is developed to achieve a peak efficiency of 15.9% with a bulk lifetime of 140 ?Simulations of further solar cell efficiency enhancement up to 17-18% are presented to provide guidance for future research.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Rohatgi, Ajeet; Committee Member: Carter, William Brent; Committee Member: Liu, Meilin; Committee Member: Wang, Z.L.; Committee Member: Wong, C.P

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