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A magnesium/amorphous silicon passivating contact for n-type crystalline silicon solar cells

Date

Authors

Wan, Yimao
Samundsett, Christian
Yan, Di
Allen, Thomas
Peng, Jun
Cui, Jie (Jason)
Zhang, Xinyu
Bullock, James
Cuevas, Andres

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American Institute of Physics (AIP)

Abstract

Among the metals, magnesium has one of the lowest work functions, with a value of 3.7 eV. This makes it very suitable to form an electron-conductive cathode contact for silicon solar cells. We present here the experimental demonstration of an amorphous silicon/magnesium/aluminium (a-Si:H/Mg/Al) passivating contact for silicon solar cells. The conduction properties of a thermally evaporated Mg/Al contact structure on n-type crystalline silicon (c-Si) are investigated, achieving a low resistivity Ohmic contact to moderately doped n-type c-Si (∼5 × 1015 cm−3) of ∼0.31 Ω cm2 and ∼0.22 Ω cm2 for samples with and without an amorphous silicon passivating interlayer, respectively. Application of the passivating cathode to the whole rear surface of n-type front junction c-Si solar cells leads to a power conversion efficiency of 19% in a proof-of-concept device. The low thermal budget of the cathode formation, its dopant-less nature, and the simplicity of the device structure enabled by the Mg/Al contact open up possibilities in designing and fabricating low-cost silicon solar cells.

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Citation

Source

Applied Physics Letters

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Access Statement

Open Access

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