AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper presents the use of metal oxides, specifically nickel oxide (NiO) and titanium oxide (TiO), as carrier-selective contacts in ultrathin crystalline silicon solar cells, leading to about a 13% increase in efficiency.
  • An ultrathin c-Si solar cell, only 2 μm thick, achieves efficiency over 10% without light-trapping, thanks to NiO's unique band offsets that reduce contact recombination.
  • The integration process for both NiO and TiO is scalable and compatible with existing manufacturing techniques, enabling a champion efficiency of 10.8% when both materials are used.

Article Abstract

In this paper, the integration of metal oxides as carrier-selective contacts for ultrathin crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cells is demonstrated which results in an ∼13% relative improvement in efficiency. The improvement in efficiency originates from the suppression of the contact recombination current due to the band offset asymmetry of these oxides with Si. First, an ultrathin c-Si solar cell having a total thickness of 2 μm is shown to have >10% efficiency without any light-trapping scheme. This is achieved by the integration of nickel oxide (NiO) as a hole-selective contact interlayer material, which has a low valence band offset and high conduction band offset with Si. Second, we show a champion cell efficiency of 10.8% with the additional integration of titanium oxide (TiO), a well-known material for an electron-selective contact interlayer. Key parameters including V and J also show different degrees of enhancement if single (NiO only) or double (both NiO and TiO) carrier-selective contacts are integrated. The fabrication process for TiO and NiO layer integration is scalable and shows good compatibility with the device.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b12886DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

c-si solar
12
band offset
12
ultrathin c-si
8
solar cell
8
carrier-selective contacts
8
improvement efficiency
8
contact interlayer
8
efficiency
5
contact
4
contact selectivity
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!