Reduction in Indium Usage for Silicon Heterojunction Solar Cells in a Short-Term Industrial Perspective

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Abstract

Herein, the interest of a sputtering power reduction during physical vapor deposition (PVD) of the rear side indium-based transparent conduction oxide (TCO) is investigated to reduce the In consumption in silicon heterojunction (SHJ) solar cells. Halving the supplied power allows for a TCO thickness reduction of 50%. Process fine-tuning is shown to retain satisfying TCO electrical properties, thus preventing unwanted additional resistance losses despite the drastic reduction in TCO thickness. The produced SHJ solar cells with a 50% reduced TCO thickness show similar performances to those made with the reference process. Using thinner TCO layers at the cell backside is, however, found to come with a bifaciality penalty, which is discussed in detail.

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Jay, F., Gageot, T., Pinoit, G., Thiriot, B., Veirman, J., Cabal, R., … Foti, M. (2023). Reduction in Indium Usage for Silicon Heterojunction Solar Cells in a Short-Term Industrial Perspective. Solar RRL, 7(8). https://doi.org/10.1002/solr.202200598

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