Titanium Dioxide Hole-Blocking Layer in Ultra-Thin-Film Crystalline Silicon Solar Cells

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Abstract

One of the remaining obstacles to achieving the theoretical efficiency limit of crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells is high interface recombination loss for minority carriers at the Ohmic contacts. The contact recombination loss of the ultra-thin-film c-Si solar cells is more severe than that of the state-of-art thick cells due to the smaller volume and higher minority carrier concentration. This paper presents a design of an electron passing (Ohmic) contact for n-type Si that is hole-blocking with significantly reduced hole recombination. By depositing a thin titanium dioxide (TiO2) layer, we form a metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) contact for a 2 μm-thick Si cell to achieve an open circuit voltage (V_{oc}) of 645 mV, which is 10 mV higher than that of an ultra-thin cell with a traditional metal contact. This TiO2 MIS contact constitutes a step towards high-efficiency ultra-thin-film c-Si solar cells.

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APA

Kang, Y., Deng, H., Chen, Y., Huo, Y., Jia, J., Zhao, L., … Harris, J. S. (2019). Titanium Dioxide Hole-Blocking Layer in Ultra-Thin-Film Crystalline Silicon Solar Cells. IEEE Photonics Journal, 11(6). https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOT.2019.2947582

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