Hydrogen-Assisted Defect Engineering of Doped Poly-Si Films for Passivating Contact Solar Cells
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Truong, Thien
Yan, Di
Samundsett, Christian
Liu, AnYao
Harvey, Steven P
Young, Matthew
Tebyetekerwa, Mike
Kremer, Felipe
Al-Jassim, Mowafak M
Ding, Zetao
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American Chemical Society
Abstract
Hydrogen-assisted defect engineering, via a hydrogenated silicon nitride (SiNx:H) capping layer, on doped polycrystalline silicon (poly-Si) passivating-contact structures, is explored using complementary techniques. The hydrogen treatment universally improves the passivation quality of poly-Si/SiOx stacks on all samples investigated. Meanwhile, their contact resistivity remains very low at ∼6 mΩ·cm2. Moreover, the nature of charge carrier recombination within the poly-Si films is also investigated by means of photoluminescence. On planar c-Si substrates, the poly-Si films emit two broad photoluminescence peaks at ∼850–1050 and ∼1300–1500 nm. The former is the characteristic peak of the hydrogenated amorphous Si (a-Si:H) phase and only appears after the treatment, demonstrating that (i) a significant amount of hydrogen has been driven into the poly-Si film and (ii) an amorphous phase is present within it. The second peak originates from sub-band-gap radiative defects inside the poly-Si films and increases after the treatment, suggesting a suppression of their nonradiative recombination channels. For films deposited on textured c-Si substrates, there is a disrupted oxide boundary, preventing a buildup of excess carriers inside the films and leading to quenching of the film luminescence.
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
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2099-12-31
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