4.4 Article

Influence of secondary phases during annealing on re-crystallization of CuInSe2 electrodeposited films

Journal

THIN SOLID FILMS
Volume 517, Issue 15, Pages 4436-4442

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.tsf.2009.01.043

Keywords

Solar cells; Electrodeposition; Scanning electron microscopy; Transmission electron microscopy; X-ray diffraction

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Electrodeposited CulnSe(2) thin films are of potential importance, as light absorber material, in the next generation of photovoltaic cells as long as we can optimize their annealing process to obtain dense and highly crystalline films. The intent of this study was to gain a basic understanding of the key experimental parameters governing the structural-textural-composition evolution of thin films as function of the annealing temperature via X-ray diffraction, scanning/transmission electron microscopy and thermal analysis measurements. The crystallization of the electrodeposited CulnSe(2) films. with the presence of Se and orthorhombic Cu2-xSe (o-Cu-2-Se-x) phases, occurs over two distinct temperature ranges, between 220 degrees C and 250 degrees C and beyond 520 degrees C. Such domains of temperature are consistent with the melting of elemental Se and the binary CuSe phase, respectively. The CuSe phase forming during annealing results from the reaction between the two secondary species o-Cu2-xSe and Se (o-Cu2-xSe + Se -> 2 CuSe) but can be decomposed into the cubic beta-Cu2-xSe phase by slowing down the heating rate. Formation of liquid CuSe beyond 520 degrees C seems to govern both the grain size of the films and the porosity of the substrate-CulnSe(2) film interface. A simple model explaining the competitive interplay between the film crystallinity and the interface porosity is proposed, aiming at an improved protocol based on temperature range, which will enable to enhance the film crystalline nature while limiting the interface porosity. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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