Increasing the efficiency of silicon heterojunction solar cells and modules by light soaking

Eiji Kobayashi, Stefaan De Wolf, Jacques Levrat, Antoine Descoeudres, Matthieu Despeisse, Franz-Josef Haug, Christophe Ballif

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

68 Scopus citations

Abstract

Silicon heterojunction solar cells use crystalline silicon (c-Si) wafers as optical absorbers and employ bilayers of doped/intrinsic hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) to form passivating contacts. Recently, we demonstrated that such solar cells increase their operating voltages and thus their conversion efficiencies during light exposure. We found that this performance increase is due to improved passivation of the a-Si:H/c-Si interface and is induced by injected charge carriers (either by light soaking or forward-voltage biasing of the device). Here, we discuss this counterintuitive behavior and establish that: (i) the performance increase is observed in solar cells as well as modules; (ii) this phenomenon requires the presence of doped a-Si:H films, but is independent from whether light is incident from the a-Si:H(p) or the a-Si:H(n) side; (iii) UV and blue photons do not play a role in this effect; (iv) the performance increase can be observed under illumination intensities as low as 20Wm (0.02-sun) and appears to be almost identical in strength when under 1-sun (1000Wm); (v) the underlying physical mechanism likely differs from annealing-induced surface passivation.
Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)43-49
Number of pages7
JournalSolar Energy Materials and Solar Cells
Volume173
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 24 2017

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