DocumentCode
1547741
Title
An Infant Mortality Study of III–V Multijunction Concentrator Cells
Author
Bosco, Nick ; Sweet, Cassi ; Ludowise, Mike ; Kurtz, Sarah
Author_Institution
Nat. Renewable Energy Lab., Golden, CO, USA
Volume
2
Issue
4
fYear
2012
Firstpage
411
Lastpage
416
Abstract
Six hundred and forty III-V triple-junction solar cells were evaluated in this study. The cells were initially electrically and optically characterized prior to being packaged and placed on-sun for a short exposure. Following exposure, the cells were partitioned according to their performance change. An infant mortality rate of 0.5% was observed and attributed to preexisting voids in the die attach that promoted thermal runaway. All other cells that significantly degraded following exposure were initially measured with shunt currents >;100 mA at 1.5 V; therefore, a similar limit would serve as an appropriate screening current and only reduce yield by ~1.5% . While many cells both above and below this shunt current limit exhibited artifacts in their electroluminescence (EL) emission, it was not found to predict subsequent performance. The current investigation, however, focused on detecting a short-term degradation and did not evaluate how artifacts in the EL emission or a short-term change in shunt current may correlate with other wear out mechanisms.
Keywords
III-V semiconductors; electroluminescence; semiconductor device reliability; semiconductor heterojunctions; solar cells; voids (solid); III-V multijunction concentrator cells; III-V triple-junction solar cells; die attach; electrical characterization; electroluminescence emission; infant mortality rate; optically characterization; performance change; screening current; short-term change; short-term degradation; shunt current limit; thermal runaway; voids; voltage 1.5 V; wear out mechanisms; Electroluminescence; Failure analysis; III-V semiconductor materials; Materials reliability; Photovoltaic cells; Materials reliability; photovoltaic cells;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Photovoltaics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2156-3381
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPHOTOV.2012.2199082
Filename
6225415
Link To Document