Polysilicon Passivating Contacts for Silicon Solar Cells: Interface Passivation and Carrier Transport Mechanism
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Authors
Liu, Wenzhu
Yang, Xinbo
Kang, Jingxuan
Li, Shuai
Xu, Lujia
Zhang, Song
Xu, Hang
Peng, Jun
Xie, Feng
Fu, Jui-Han
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American Chemical Society
Abstract
Polysilicon passivating contacts, consisting of a
stack of tunnel-oxide and doped polysilicon layers, can
simultaneously provide excellent surface passivation and low
contact resistivity for silicon solar cells. Nevertheless, the
microscopic interfacial characteristics of such contacts are not
yet fully understood. In this work, by investigating the surface
passivation evolution of polysilicon passivating contacts under
increasing annealing temperatures, we unveil these characteristics.
Before annealing, we find that the Si and O atoms within
the tunnel-oxide layer are mostly unsaturated, whereas the O
atoms introduce acceptor-like defects. These defects cause
Fermi-level pinning and high carrier recombination. During annealing, we identify two distinct chemical passivation regimes
driven by surface hydrogenation and oxidation. We attribute the excellent chemical passivation activated by high-temperature
annealing (∼850 °C) mainly to the tunnel oxide reconstruction, which effectively reduces the acceptor-like state density. During
the oxide reconstruction, we also find that subnanometer pits (rather than pinholes) are formed in the oxide. A combination of
experimental and theoretical investigations demonstrates these subnanometer pits provide excellent surface passivation and
efficient tunneling for majority carriers.
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
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Restricted until
2099-12-31