Effects of nanostructured back reflectors on the external quantum efficiency in thin film solar cells

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Abstract

Hydrogenated amorphous Si (α-Si:H) is a promising material for photovoltaic applications due to its low cost, high abundance, long lifetime, and non-toxicity. We demonstrate a device designed to investigate the effect of nanostructured back reflectors on quantum efficiency in photovoltaic devices. We adopt a superstrate configuration so that we may use conventional industrial light trapping strategies for thin film solar cells as a reference for comparison. We controlled the nanostructure parameters via a wafer-scale self-assembly technique and systematically studied the relation between nanostructure size and photocurrent generation. The gain/loss transition at short wavelengths showed red-shifts with decreasing nanostructure scale. In the infrared region the nanostructured back reflector shows large photocurrent enhancement with a modified feature scale. This device geometry is a useful archetype for investigating absorption enhancement by nanostructures. © 2010 Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Hsu, C., Burkhard, G. F., McGehee, M. D., & Cui, Y. (2011). Effects of nanostructured back reflectors on the external quantum efficiency in thin film solar cells. Nano Research, 4(2), 153–158. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12274-010-0064-y

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