The present invention relates to solar cells and more particularly, relates to thin film solar cells.
The present invention is a novel device, system, and method for a thin silicon solar cell with epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELO) structure. An exemplary thin silicon solar cell structure has a p+ silicon substrate and a dielectric layer disposed over the p+ silicon substrate. One or more trenches are defined within the dielectric layer. A thin n type silicon layer is grown on the p+ silicon substrate within the trench by epitaxial lateral overgrowth wherein a junction area of the solar cell is minimized within the trench.
The present invention is not intended to be limited to a system or method that must satisfy one or more of any stated objects or features of the invention. It is also important to note that the present invention is not limited to the exemplary or primary embodiments described herein. Modifications and substitutions by one of ordinary skill in the art are considered to be within the scope of the present invention, which is not to be limited except by the following claims.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description, taken together with the drawings wherein:
a-f are photographs of six different exemplary patterns after the Si growth according to the first exemplary embodiment of the invention.
According to a first exemplary embodiment, thin Si solar cell with epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELO) structure described herein may demonstrate higher open circuit voltage (Voc) . According to simulation results, high voltage can be obtained even without light trapping on the backside of the thin Si layer. Thin n type silicon layer has been grown on p+ Si substrate using a method of epitaxial lateral overgrowth by Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD). A scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has been used to show the dimension of the pn junction region and light generation region after the n type Si growth.
Open circuit voltage (Voc) is an important parameter in determining the performance of a solar cell [1]. The first exemplary embodiment utilizes the Epitaxial Lateral Overgrowth (ELO) to obtain a thin crystalline n type Si layer on a highly doped p type (100) orientated Si substrate. The thin Si has been grown by CVD out of line patterns with different line widths, spacing and orientations, using thermally-grown SiO2 as the mask. The thin crystalline n type Si layer may be continuous or non-continuous according to various different embodiment of the invention.
Compared with the normal thin Si solar cells [3] having the same light generation area, this structure may be used to provide a smaller junction areas which can lower the saturation current and should result in higher Voc. Meanwhile, the planar Si solar cells have also been fabricated on the same substrate. The open circuit voltage is analyzed and compared among different thin Si solar cells using the same Si substrate.
Referring to
Referring to
For each case, the increase of bulk lifetime from 10 μs to 100 μs may give roughly a 2.5% improvement in efficiency. But perfect light trapping may give roughly a 4-7% increase in efficiency, when the bulk lifetime is 10 μs and 100 μs respectively and the absorber thickness is between 10 μm and 20 μm. High efficiency can be achieved for a thin silicon solar cell with reduced minority carrier lifetime. For a minority carrier lifetime of 10 μs, an efficiency of 22% can be achieved for a thin silicon solar cell.
Referring to
Step (1): P+, (100) oriented Si wafer may be the substrate.
Step (2): A 800 nm SiO2 layer may be thermally grown on the substrate.
Step (3): Utilizing photolithography, different patterns may be defined. The patterns may have different geometries. In the drawing, we use line pattern for an example. The SiO2 in the opening may be etched off in 5:1 buffered oxide etch (BOE).
Step (4): After the cleaning of the patterned surface, n type thin silicon may be grown by CVD using the method of epitaxial lateral overgrowth.
Step (5): A POCl3 diffusion forms an n+ region to the n type Si surface.
Step (6) : The back contact Al may be evaporated by e-beam and then annealed in tube furnace. Finally, the top contact Ti/Pd/Ag (20 nm/20 nm/1000 nm) may be evaporated by e-beam. A double layer antireflection coating may be deposited on the device.
Referring to
Therefore, by using the exemplary structure, significant improvement in open circuit voltage can be achieved. The ratio of light generation region area to junction area can be designed larger to have greater improvement in Voc. To realize this structure, the processing may utilize photolithography, epitaxial lateral overgrowth and basic silicon solar cell processing technique.
Referring to
The star pattern (e) provides information on the degree of lateral over growth and quality of growth on each direction. For the mask used which is shown in
Based on the growth results from star pattern, patterns may be designed having different orientations on the same wafer to get different lateral overgrowth. In this case, different ratios of light generation area to junction area can be obtained after a single Si growth.
For the horizontal pattern (b), there are six regions shown. After etching off the oxide in step (3), the line dimension for each region (from top to bottom) is shown in the following table 1.
The vertical and diagonal patterns also have the six regions, but have different orientations of the lines.
In the pictures before ELO growth, the white lines are openings in oxide, where Si may first start to grow. In the pictures after ELO growth, the white part is grown Si. Si is connected for 10 μm spacing, and not connected for 20 μm spacing. Solar cells may be made from all these regions.
Referring to
According to a second exemplary embodiment, a thin silicon solar cell structure may be provided using silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology with properties of high voltage in thin silicon designs with an epitaxial emitter. Design parameters may low rear and front surface recombination, low dark current and efficient light trapping. A patterned emitter area on a SOI substrate may be provided. The advantages of this design may be the passivation properties embedded in the buried oxide and the reduced junction area. With a uniform epitaxial emitter, the top contact shadowing can be designed to be 0%. Exemplary results show Voc>525 mV and JSC>20 mA/cm2. This current design also demonstrates the effect of a smaller emitter area and reports higher performance parameters for reported silicon cells fabricated on SOI substrates.
SOI may provide potential of high Voc thin silicon designs. The high performance thin crystalline silicon solar cell opportunity is based on high open circuit voltage (Voc) due to low base recombination. Thin silicon solar cells can have higher voltages if there is low rear and front surface recombination. To achieve high voltages, a low dark current and low back surface recombination may be required.
Different approaches to thin cells grown on low cost substrates have been studied. Glass is a very low cost option but processing difficulties have shown it may not be the best choice. The use of silicon as the substrate has shown efficiencies of 12.7% with a 30 μm epitaxial layer. Thin cells with epitaxially grown base and emitters on a crystalline substrate demonstrated 14.2% efficient cells with a base thickness below 15 μm. Porous silicon has been used as an alternative for a reflector layer to improve light trapping. In SOI material, the buried oxide (BOx) may not only provide self passivation properties but may also provide optical properties that can be used to enhance the photovoltaic response. Exemplary embodiments may achiever efficiencies of 6 to 8% for 6 μm. thick layers with an active area contact of 4% to 40% of the cell area. Voltage and current are proportional to the epitaxial layer area coverage of cells which is evidence of reduced dark current in the emitter and some light reflection from the oxide.
The use of SOI with a high performance device design may overcome difficulties of same surface contact designs. The substrate may be used as a base and the emitter may be epitaxially grown with different layouts and geometries as shown in
More than 700 mV are feasible for n-type active layers below 35 μm. The n-type epitaxial layer of good quality provides a uniform doping concentration and low defect density throughout all the emitter volume. This epitaxial emitter may overcome the complexity in doped junctions due to the presence of a doping profile that causes internal electric fields, dependence of diffusion length and mobility on the carrier concentration, band gap narrowing due to high doping. The injected current may be dependent on JOE, where the surface recombination velocity has to be kept low (SR<103 cm/s) and the surface carrier concentration at the surface below 2×1019 cm−3.
The exemplary device may be based on a p-type silicon-on-insulator (SOI) substrate that is used to grow an n-type crystalline silicon emitter. The n-type layer thickness may be kept below 15 μm and therefore the active part of the cell will be retained in the front of the solar cell. Combined simulations and practical results have demonstrated a high performance solar cell using commercially available SOI substrates. One advantage of the SOI substrate may be the passivation properties embedded in the buried oxide that may provide a lower emitter and front surface recombination velocities. The starting point of the actively thin solar cells may be the silicon growth on available passivated substrates. The combination of simulations, improved fabrication technology, and low surface recombination demonstrates a path to high voltage, efficient thin crystalline silicon solar cells.
The fabrication process of the cell starts with the patterning of the active areas on the SOI substrate. Reactive ion etching may be used to remove the device layer and wet etching to remove the oxide and reach the base. An epitaxial layer may be grown with CVD techniques on the whole substrate. The additional n-type diffusion on top of the n-layer facilitates contact formation and reduces recombination at the metal-silicon interface. Referring to
Cells with different active area coverage (4%, 8%, 18%, 40%, 100%) may be fabricated with the same epitaxial layer growth process and using the same SOI substrate. All cells may have a standard DLAR (no additional passivation oxide) to increase for light trapping.
Results have shown Voc above 525 mV for all grid epi-SOI cells compared to the planar cell fabricated on the same substrate which has a lower Voc. The increase may be attributed to the JOE reduction. The substrate used does not have the optimal doping concentration. Higher Voc values may be achieved with a passivation layer, a thinner emitter, top contact annealing and the optimal substrate concentration. Short circuit current densities are above 20 mA/cm2.
Referring to
Factors that can lead to high Voc in this solar cell are the low front surface recombination and high minority carrier lifetime. The achieved surface passivation reflects a large increase in open circuit voltage (larger than that of thick cells). A SINTON® WCT-120 lifetime tested was used to measure carrier lifetimes. The buried oxide in the SOI substrate acts as a back surface field and provides good isolation for adjacent cells. This novel design uses existing layers as potential barriers (BSF) in the solar cell.
Different layouts used for the active areas may show paths to reduced dark current. The reduced contact area through the substrate and an improved back surface recombination may result in higher Voc. Random light trapping may be added to the top surface to increase absorption and current and are within the scope of the invention.
Other modifications and substitutions by one of ordinary skill in the art are considered to be within the scope of the present invention, which is not to be limited except by the following claims.
This research was, in part, funded by the U.S. Government Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under Agreement No.: HR0011-0709-0005. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, either express or implied, of the U.S. Government.
[1] A. Barnett, C. Honsberg, et al. High Performance Thin Silicon Solar Cells. 22nd European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference, September 2007.
[2] D. D. Rathman, D. J. Silversmith and J. A. Burns. Lateral Epitaxial Overgrowth of Silicon on SiO2. J. Electrochem. Soc.: SOLID-STATE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Vol. 129, No. 10.
[3] T. Buck, A. Helfricht, et al. Crystalline Si Thin Film n-Type Solar Cells: A Screen Printed Rear Junction Approach. 22nd European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference, September 2007.
[4] F. Duerinckx, I. Kuzma Filipek, et al. Optical Path Length Enhancement For >13% Screenprinted Thin Film Silicon Solar Cells. 21st European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference, September 2006.
E. Schmich, et al. Improvement of Epitaxial Crystalline Silicon Thin-film Solar Cells at Fraunhofer ISE, IEEE 33rd PVSC (2008)
F. Duerinckx, et al. Optical path length enhancement for >13% screenprinted thin film silicon solar cells. 21st European PVSEC (2006)
R. Prinja, et al. Absorption enhancement in thin-film silicon solar cells in SOI configuration using physical and geometrical optics. IEEE 33rd PVSC. (2007)
L. Danos, G. Jones, R. Greef, T. Markvart. Ultra thin silicon solar cell: modeling and characterization. Phys. Stat. Sol. C. 1407-1410 (2008) Danos, et al, used a SOI substrate to grow n and p Si (0.2 μm) on the BOx in a lateral geometry. By only using the device layer, a very low current (0.065 mA) was achieved with n and p contacts on the top surface, using the BOx as a support layer and reflector.
This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/184,653 filed Jun. 5, 2009, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/244,579 filed Sep. 22, 2009 the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61184653 | Jun 2009 | US | |
61244579 | Sep 2009 | US |