DocumentCode
3384220
Title
Impact of annealing on passivation of a-Si:H / c-Si heterostructures
Author
Wolf, Stefaan De ; Fujiwara, Hiroyuki ; Kondo, Michio
Author_Institution
Research Center for Photovoltaics, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, 1-1-1 Umezono, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568, Japan
fYear
2008
fDate
11-16 May 2008
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
4
Abstract
The a-Si:H / c-Si heterostructure, is an attractive solution to avoid the presence of highly recombinative metal contacts at the surfaces of c-Si based solar cells. To assure good interface passivation, insertion of a sandwiched thin device-grade intrinsic a-Si:H(i) film is recommended between substrate and doped a-Si:H layer. In this article we discuss our findings on the impact of low-temperature post-deposition annealing on the passivation properties of such stacks: we have identified two fundamentally different recombination mechanisms that may critically affect heterostructure device performance. Firstly, for the intrinsic buffer layer, whereas abrupt a-Si:H / c-Si interfaces typically benefit from post deposition annealing, it is shown that this is not true when epitaxially grown Si material is present at the interface. Secondly, in case the buffer layer is covered with a doped a-Si:H overlayer, annealing may again be detrimental for the interface passivation. The latter is linked to the fact that the presence of such doped layer may lower the energy required for Fermi-level dependent Si-H bond rupture in the underlying intrinsic buffer layer, resulting in enhanced interface recombination.
Keywords
Annealing; Buffer layers; Material properties; Passivation; Photovoltaic cells; Plasma temperature; Rough surfaces; Substrates; Surface cleaning; Surface roughness;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference, 2008. PVSC '08. 33rd IEEE
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA, USA
ISSN
0160-8371
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1640-0
Electronic_ISBN
0160-8371
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVSC.2008.4922851
Filename
4922851
Link To Document