Thermal stability of photovoltaic a-Si:H determined by neutron reflectometry

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Abstract

Neutron and X-ray reflectometry were used to determine the layer structure and hydrogen content of thin films of amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) deposited onto crystalline silicon (Si) wafers for surface passivation in solar cells. The combination of these two reflectometry techniques is well suited for non-destructive probing of the structure of a-Si:H due to being able to probe buried interfaces and having sub-nanometer resolution. Neutron reflectometry is also unique in its ability to allow determination of density gradients of light elements such as hydrogen (H). The neutron scattering contrast between Si and H is strong, making it possible to determine the H concentration in the deposited a-Si:H. In order to correlate the surface passivation properties supplied by the a-Si:H thin films, as quantified by obtainable effective minority carrier lifetime, photoconductance measurements were also performed. It is shown that the minority carrier lifetime falls sharply when H has been desorbed from a-Si:H by annealing.

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Qviller, A. J., Dennison, A. J. C., Haug, H., You, C. C., Hasle, I. M., Østreng, E., … Hauback, B. C. (2014). Thermal stability of photovoltaic a-Si:H determined by neutron reflectometry. Applied Physics Letters, 105(23). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4904340

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