Copper-indium-gallium-diselenide (CIGS) thin-film solar cells suffer from high recombination losses at the back contact and parasitic absorption in the front-contact layers. Dielectric passivation layers overcome these limitations and enable an efficient control over interface recombination, which becomes increasingly relevant as thin-film solar cells increase in efficiency and become thinner to reduce the consumption of precious resources. We present the optoelectronic and chemical interface properties of oxide-based passivation layers deposited by atomic layer deposition on CIGS. A suitable postdeposition annealing removes detrimental interface defects and leads to restructuring and oxidation of the CIGS surface. The optoelectronic interface properties are very similar for different passivation approaches, demonstrating that an efficient suppression of interface states is possible independent of the metal used in the passivating oxide. If aluminum oxide (Al2O3) is used as the passivation layer we confirm an additional field-effect passivation due to interface charges, resulting in an efficient interface passivation superior to that of a state-of-the-art cadmium-sulfide (CdS) buffer layer. Based on this chemical interface model we present a full-area rear-interface passivation layer without any contact patterning, resulting in a 1% absolute efficiency gain compared to a standard molybdenum back contact.

Werner, F., Veith-Wolf, B., Spindler, C., Barget, M., Babbe, F., Guillot, J., et al. (2020). Oxidation as Key Mechanism for Efficient Interface Passivation in Cu (In,Ga)Se2 Thin-Film Solar Cells. PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED, 13(5) [10.1103/physrevapplied.13.054004].

Oxidation as Key Mechanism for Efficient Interface Passivation in Cu (In,Ga)Se2 Thin-Film Solar Cells

Barget, MR;
2020

Abstract

Copper-indium-gallium-diselenide (CIGS) thin-film solar cells suffer from high recombination losses at the back contact and parasitic absorption in the front-contact layers. Dielectric passivation layers overcome these limitations and enable an efficient control over interface recombination, which becomes increasingly relevant as thin-film solar cells increase in efficiency and become thinner to reduce the consumption of precious resources. We present the optoelectronic and chemical interface properties of oxide-based passivation layers deposited by atomic layer deposition on CIGS. A suitable postdeposition annealing removes detrimental interface defects and leads to restructuring and oxidation of the CIGS surface. The optoelectronic interface properties are very similar for different passivation approaches, demonstrating that an efficient suppression of interface states is possible independent of the metal used in the passivating oxide. If aluminum oxide (Al2O3) is used as the passivation layer we confirm an additional field-effect passivation due to interface charges, resulting in an efficient interface passivation superior to that of a state-of-the-art cadmium-sulfide (CdS) buffer layer. Based on this chemical interface model we present a full-area rear-interface passivation layer without any contact patterning, resulting in a 1% absolute efficiency gain compared to a standard molybdenum back contact.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Alumina; Aluminum oxide; Atomic layer deposition; Buffer layers; Cadmium sulfide; Cadmium sulfide solar cells; Copper compounds; Efficiency; Gallium compounds; II-VI semiconductors; Indium compounds; Passivation; Selenium compounds; Sulfur compounds; Thin film solar cells; Thin films
English
2020
13
5
054004
open
Werner, F., Veith-Wolf, B., Spindler, C., Barget, M., Babbe, F., Guillot, J., et al. (2020). Oxidation as Key Mechanism for Efficient Interface Passivation in Cu (In,Ga)Se2 Thin-Film Solar Cells. PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED, 13(5) [10.1103/physrevapplied.13.054004].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/490419
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