Title :
Stable passivations for high-efficiency silicon solar cells
Author :
Gruenbaum, P. ; Gan, J. ; King, R. ; Swanson, R.
Author_Institution :
Stanford Electron. Lab., CA, USA
Abstract :
Initial designs of single-crystal silicon point-contact solar cells have shown a degradation in their efficiency after being exposed to concentrated sunlight. The main mechanism appears to be an increase in recombination centers at the Si/SiO2 interface due to ultraviolet light photoinjecting electrons from the silicon conduction band into the silicon dioxide that passivates the cell´s front surface. Trichloroethane, texturization, and aluminum during the forming gas anneal all contribute to the instability of the interface. A reasonably good resistance to UV light can be obtained by putting a phosphorus diffusion at the surface and can be improved further by stripping off the deposited oxide after the diffusion and regrowing a dry thermal oxide. A second technique, which utilizes ultrathin oxides and thin polysilicon films and can yield stable point-contact solar cells that are more efficient at higher concentrations, is also described
Keywords :
elemental semiconductors; passivation; silicon; solar cells; P diffusion; Si solar cells; Si-SiO2; dry thermal oxide; high-efficiency; point-contact solar cells; semiconductor; single-crystal; stable passivation; surface diffusion; thin polysilicon films; ultrathin oxides; Aluminum; Annealing; Degradation; Electrons; Passivation; Photovoltaic cells; Silicon compounds; Spontaneous emission; Surface resistance; Thermal resistance;
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference, 1990., Conference Record of the Twenty First IEEE
Conference_Location :
Kissimmee, FL
DOI :
10.1109/PVSC.1990.111639