4.8 Article

Si microwire-array solar cells

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 1037-1041

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c0ee00014k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BP
  2. Department of Energy (Basic Energy Sciences, Energy Frontier Research Center) [DE-SC0001293, DE-FG02-07ER46405]
  3. Caltech Center for Sustainable Energy Research, the Center for Science and Engineering of Materials-an NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center at Caltech [DMR 0520565]
  4. National Science Foundation
  5. Kavli Nanoscience Institute

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Si microwire-array solar cells with Air Mass 1.5 Global conversion efficiencies of up to 7.9% have been fabricated using an active volume of Si equivalent to a 4 mm thick Si wafer. These solar cells exhibited open-circuit voltages of 500 mV, short-circuit current densities (J(sc)) of up to 24 mA cm(-2), and fill factors >65% and employed Al2O3 dielectric particles that scattered light incident in the space between the wires, a Ag back reflector that prevented the escape of incident illumination from the back surface of the solar cell, and an a-SiNx:H passivation/anti-reflection layer. Wire-array solar cells without some or all of these design features were also fabricated to demonstrate the importance of the light-trapping elements in achieving a high J(sc). Scanning photocurrent microscopy images of the microwire-array solar cells revealed that the higher J(sc) of the most advanced cell design resulted from an increased absorption of light incident in the space between the wires. Spectral response measurements further revealed that solar cells with light-trapping elements exhibited improved red and infrared response, as compared to solar cells without light-trapping elements.

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