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Crystalline silicon

Crystalline silicon or (c-Si) Is the crystalline forms of silicon, either polycrystalline silicon (poly-Si, consisting of small crystals), or monocrystalline silicon (mono-Si, a continuous crystal). Crystalline silicon is the dominant semiconducting material used in photovoltaic technology for the production of solar cells. These cells are assembled into solar panels as part of a photovoltaic system to generate solar power from sunlight.

Crystalline-silicon solar cells are made of either Poly Silicon (left side) or Mono Silicon (right side).

In electronics, crystalline silicon is typically the monocrystalline form of silicon, and is used for producing microchips. This silicon contains much lower impurity levels than those required for solar cells. Production of semiconductor grade silicon involves a chemical purification to produce Hyper-pure Polysilicon, followed by a recrystallization process to grow monocrystalline silicon. The cylindrical boules are then cut into wafers for further processing.

Solar cells made of crystalline silicon are often called conventional, traditional, or first generation solar cells, as they were developed in the 1950s and remained the most common type up to the present time.[1][2] Because they are produced from 160 to 190 μm thick solar wafers—slices from bulks of solar grade silicon—they are sometimes called wafer-based solar cells.

Solar cells made from c-Si are single-junction cells and are generally more efficient than their rival technologies, which are the second-generation thin-film solar cells, the most important being CdTe, CIGS, and amorphous silicon (a-Si). Amorphous silicon is an allotropic variant of silicon, and amorphous means "without shape" to describe its non-crystalline form.[3]: 29 

Overview edit

Global PV market by technology in 2021.[4]: 24, 25 

  CdTe (4.1%)
  a-Si (0.1%)
  CIGS (0.8%)
  mono-Si (82%)
  multi-Si (13%)

Classification edit

The allotropic forms of silicon range from a single crystalline structure to a completely unordered amorphous structure with several intermediate varieties. In addition, each of these different forms can possess several names and even more abbreviations, and often cause confusion to non-experts, especially as some materials and their application as a PV technology are of minor significance, while other materials are of outstanding importance.

PV industry edit

In photovoltaic industry,materials are commonly grouped into the following two categories:

Generations edit

Alternatively, different types of solar cells and/or their semiconducting materials can be classified by generations:

  • First generation solar cells are made of crystalline silicon, also called, conventional, traditional, wafer-based solar cells and include monocrystalline (mono-Si) and polycrystalline (multi-Si) semiconducting materials.
  • Second generation solar cells or panels are based on thin-film technology and are of commercially significant importance. These include CdTe, CIGS and amorphous silicon.
  • Third generation solar cells are often labeled as emerging technologies with little or no market significance and include a large range of substances, mostly organic, often using organometallic compounds.

Arguably, multi-junction photovoltaic cells can be classified to neither of these generations. A typical triple junction semiconductor is made of InGaP/(In)GaAs/Ge.[5][6]

Comparison of technical specifications edit

Categories Technology η (%) VOC (V) ISC (A) W/m2 t (μm)
Thin-film solar cells
a-Si 11.1 6.3 0.0089 33 1
CdTe 16.5 0.86 0.029 5
CIGS 20.5

Market share edit

 
Global Photovoltaics market share by technology 1980–2021.[4]: 24, 25 

In 2013, conventional crystalline silicon technology dominated worldwide PV production, with multi-Si leading the market ahead of mono-Si, accounting for 54% and 36%, respectively. For the last ten years, worldwide market-share of thin-film technologies stagnated below 18% and currently stand at 9%. In the thin-film market, CdTe leads with an annual production of 2 GWp or 5%, followed by a-Si and CIGS, both around 2%.[3]: 4, 18  Alltime deployed PV capacity of 139 gigawatts (cumulative as of 2013) splits up into 121 GW crystalline silicon (87%) and 18 GW thin-film (13%) technology.[3]: 41 

Efficiency edit

 
Conversion Efficiencies of best research solar cells worldwide for various Photovoltaic Technologies since 1976.

The conversion efficiency of PV devices describes the energy-ratio of the outgoing electrical power compared to the incoming radiated light. A single solar cells has generally a better, or higher efficiency than an entire solar module. Additionally, lab efficiency is always far superior to that of goods that are sold commercially.

Lab cells

In 2013, record Lab cell efficiency was highest for crystalline silicon. However, multi-silicon is followed closely by cadmium telluride and copper indium gallium selenide solar cells.

  1. 25.6% ------- mono-Si cell
  2. 20.4% -------- multi-Si cell
  3. 21.7% ----------- CIGS cell
  4. 21.5% ----------- CdTe cell

Both-sides-contacted silicon solar cells as of 2021: 26% and possibly above.[7][8]

Modules

The average commercial crystalline silicon module increased its efficiency from about 12% to 16% over the last ten years. In the same period CdTe-modules improved their efficiency from 9 to 16%. The modules performing best under lab conditions in 2014 were made of monocrystalline silicon. They were 7% above the efficiency of commercially produced modules (23% over 16%) which indicated that the conventional silicon technology still had potential to improve and therefore maintain its leading position.[3]: 6 

Energy costs of manufacture edit

Crystalline silicon has a high cost in energy because silicon is produced by the reduction of high-grade quartz sand in an electric furnace. The electricity generated for this process may produce greenhouse gas emissions. This coke-fired smelting process occurs at high temperatures of more than 1,000 °C and is very energy intensive, using about 11 kilowatt-hours (kWh) per kilogram of silicon.[9]

The energy requirements of this process per unit of silicon metal produced may be relatively inelastic. But major energy cost reductions per (photovoltaic) product have been made as silicon cells have become more efficient at converting sunlight, larger silicon metal ingots are cut with less waste into thinner wafers, silicon waste from manufacture is recycled, and material costs have reduced.[3]: 29 

Toxicity edit

With the exception of amorphous silicon, most commercially established PV technologies use toxic heavy metals. CIGS often uses a CdS buffer layer, and the semiconductor material of CdTe-technology itself contains the toxic cadmium (Cd). In the case of crystalline silicon modules, the solder material that joins the copper strings of the cells, it contains about 36% of lead (Pb). Moreover, the paste used for screen printing front and back contacts contains traces of Pb and sometimes Cd as well. It is estimated that about 1,000 metric tonnes of Pb have been used for 100 gigawatts of c-Si solar modules. However, there is no fundamental need for lead in the solder alloy.[10]

Cell technologies edit

PERC solar cell edit

Passivated emitter rear contact (PERC) solar cells [11] consist of the addition of an extra layer to the rear-side of a solar cell. This dielectric passive layer acts to reflect unabsorbed light back to the solar cell for a second absorption attempt increasing the solar cell efficiency.[12]

A PERC is created through an additional film deposition and etching process. Etching can be done either by chemical or laser processing. About 80% of solar panels worldwide use the PERC design.[13] Martin Green, Andrew Blakers, Jianhua Zhao and Aihua Wang won the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering in 2023 for development of the PERC solar cell.[14]

HIT solar cell edit

 
Schematics of a HIT-cell...

A HIT solar cell is composed of a mono thin crystalline silicon wafer surrounded by ultra-thin amorphous silicon layers.[15] The acronym HIT stands for "heterojunction with intrinsic thin layer". HIT cells are produced by the Japanese multinational electronics corporation Panasonic (see also Sanyo § Solar cells and plants).[16] Panasonic and several other groups have reported several advantages of the HIT design over its traditional c-Si counterpart:

1. An intrinsic a-Si layer can act as an effective surface passivation layer for c-Si wafer.

2. The p+/n+ doped a-Si functions as an effective emitter/BSF for the cell.

3. The a-Si layers are deposited at much lower temperature, compared to the processing temperatures for traditional diffused c-Si technology.

4. The HIT cell has a lower temperature coefficient compared to c-Si cell technology.

Owing to all these advantages, this new hetero-junction solar cell is a considered to be a promising low cost alternative to traditional c-Si based solar cells.

Fabrication of HIT cells edit

The details of the fabrication sequence vary from group to group. Typically in good quality, CZ/FZ grown c-Si wafer (with ~1ms lifetimes) are used as the absorber layer of HIT cells. Using alkaline etchants, such as, NaOH or (CH3)4NOH the (100) surface of the wafer is textured to form the pyramids of 5-10μm height. Next, the wafer is cleaned using peroxide and HF solutions. This is followed by deposition of intrinsic a-Si passivation layer, typically through PECVD or Hot-wire CVD.[17][18] The silane (SiH4) gas diluted with H2 is used as a precursor. The deposition temperature and pressure is maintained at 200o C and 0.1-1 Torr. Precise control over this step is essential to avoid the formation of defective epitaxial Si.[19]

Cycles of deposition and annealing and H2 plasma treatment are shown to have provided excellent surface passivation.[20][21] Diborane or Trimethylboron gas mixed with SiH4 is used to deposit p-type a-Si layer, while, Phosphine gas mixed with SiH4 is used to deposit n-type a-Si layer. Direct deposition of doped a-Si layers on c-Si wafer is shown to have very poor passivation properties.[22] This is most likely due to dopant induced defect generation in a-Si layers.[23] Sputtered Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) is commonly used as a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) layer on top of the front and back a-Si layer in bi-facial design, as a-Si has high lateral resistance.

It is generally deposited on the back side as well fully metallized cell to avoid diffusion of back metal and also for impedance matching for the reflected light.[24] The silver/aluminum grid of 50-100μm thick is deposited through stencil printing for the front contact and back contact for bi-facial design. The detailed description of the fabrication process can be found in.[25]

Opto-electrical modeling and characterization of HIT cells edit

The literature discusses several studies to interpret carrier transport bottlenecks in these cells. Traditional light and dark I-V are extensively studied [26][27][28] and are observed to have several non-trivial features, which cannot be explained using the traditional solar cell diode theory.[29] This is because of the presence of hetero-junction between the intrinsic a-Si layer and c-Si wafer which introduces additional complexities to current flow.[26][30] In addition, there has been significant efforts to characterize this solar cell using C-V,[31][32] impedance spectroscopy,[31][33][34] surface photo-voltage,[35] suns-Voc[36][37] to produce complementary information.

Further, a number of design improvements, such as, the use of new emitters,[38] bifacial configuration, interdigitated back contact (IBC) configuration[39] bifacial-tandem configuration[40] are actively being pursued.

Mono-silicon edit

 
Schematic of allotropic forms of silicon.

Monocrystalline silicon (mono c-Si) is a form in which the crystal structure is homogeneous throughout the material; the orientation, lattice parameter, and electronic properties are constant throughout the material.[41] Dopant atoms such as phosphorus and boron are often incorporated into the film to make the silicon n-type or p-type respectively. Monocrystalline silicon is fabricated in the form of silicon wafers, usually by the Czochralski Growth method, and can be quite expensive depending on the radial size of the desired single crystal wafer (around $200 for a 300 mm Si wafer).[41] This monocrystalline material, while useful, is one of the chief expenses associated with producing photovoltaics where approximately 40% of the final price of the product is attributable to the cost of the starting silicon wafer used in cell fabrication.[42]

Polycrystalline silicon edit

Polycrystalline silicon is composed of many smaller silicon grains of varied crystallographic orientation, typically >1 mm in size. This material can be synthesized easily by allowing liquid silicon to cool using a seed crystal of the desired crystal structure. Additionally, other methods for forming smaller-grained polycrystalline silicon (poly-Si) exist such as high temperature chemical vapor deposition (CVD).

Not classified as Crystalline silicon edit

These allotropic forms of silicon are not classified as crystalline silicon. They belong to the group of thin-film solar cells.

Amorphous silicon edit

Amorphous silicon (a-Si) has no long-range periodic order. The application of amorphous silicon to photovoltaics as a standalone material is somewhat limited by its inferior electronic properties.[43] When paired with microcrystalline silicon in tandem and triple-junction solar cells, however, higher efficiency can be attained than with single-junction solar cells.[44] This tandem assembly of solar cells allows one to obtain a thin-film material with a bandgap of around 1.12 eV (the same as single-crystal silicon) compared to the bandgap of amorphous silicon of 1.7-1.8 eV bandgap. Tandem solar cells are then attractive since they can be fabricated with a bandgap similar to single-crystal silicon but with the ease of amorphous silicon.

Nanocrystalline silicon edit

Nanocrystalline silicon (nc-Si), sometimes also known as microcrystalline silicon (μc-Si), is a form of porous silicon.[45] It is an allotropic form of silicon with paracrystalline structure—is similar to amorphous silicon (a-Si), in that it has an amorphous phase. Where they differ, however, is that nc-Si has small grains of crystalline silicon within the amorphous phase. This is in contrast to polycrystalline silicon (poly-Si) which consists solely of crystalline silicon grains, separated by grain boundaries. The difference comes solely from the grain size of the crystalline grains. Most materials with grains in the micrometre range are actually fine-grained polysilicon, so nanocrystalline silicon is a better term. The term Nanocrystalline silicon refers to a range of materials around the transition region from amorphous to microcrystalline phase in the silicon thin film.

Protocrystalline silicon edit

Protocrystalline silicon has a higher efficiency than amorphous silicon (a-Si) and it has also been shown to improve stability, but not eliminate it.[46][47] A Protocrystalline phase is a distinct phase occurring during crystal growth which evolves into a microcrystalline form.

Protocrystalline Si also has a relatively low absorption near the band gap owing to its more ordered crystalline structure. Thus, protocrystalline and amorphous silicon can be combined in a tandem solar cell where the top layer of thin protocrystalline silicon absorbs short-wavelength light whereas the longer wavelengths are absorbed by the underlying a-Si substrate.

Transformation of amorphous into crystalline silicon edit

Amorphous silicon can be transformed to crystalline silicon using well-understood and widely implemented high-temperature annealing processes. The typical method used in industry requires high-temperature compatible materials, such as special high temperature glass that is expensive to produce. However, there are many applications for which this is an inherently unattractive production method.

Low temperature induced crystallization edit

Flexible solar cells have been a topic of interest for less conspicuous-integrated power generation than solar power farms. These modules may be placed in areas where traditional cells would not be feasible, such as wrapped around a telephone pole or cell phone tower. In this application, a photovoltaic material may be applied to a flexible substrate, often a polymer. Such substrates cannot survive the high temperatures experienced during traditional annealing. Instead, novel methods of crystallizing the silicon without disturbing the underlying substrate have been studied extensively. Aluminum-induced crystallization (AIC) and local laser crystallization are common in the literature, however not extensively used in industry.

In both of these methods, amorphous silicon is grown using traditional techniques such as plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD). The crystallization methods diverge during post-deposition processing. In aluminum-induced crystallization, a thin layer of aluminum (50 nm or less) is deposited by physical vapor deposition onto the surface of the amorphous silicon. This stack of material is then annealed at a relatively low temperature between 140 °C and 200 °C in a vacuum. The aluminum that diffuses into the amorphous silicon is believed to weaken the hydrogen bonds present, allowing crystal nucleation and growth.[48] Experiments have shown that polycrystalline silicon with grains on the order of 0.2 – 0.3 μm can be produced at temperatures as low as 150 °C. The volume fraction of the film that is crystallized is dependent on the length of the annealing process.[48]

Aluminum-induced crystallization produces polycrystalline silicon with suitable crystallographic and electronic properties that make it a candidate for producing polycrystalline thin films for photovoltaics.[48] AIC can be used to generate crystalline silicon nanowires and other nano-scale structures.

Another method of achieving the same result is the use of a laser to heat the silicon locally without heating the underlying substrate beyond some upper-temperature limit. An excimer laser or, alternatively, green lasers such as a frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser is used to heat the amorphous silicon, supplying the energy necessary to nucleate grain growth. The laser fluence must be carefully controlled in order to induce crystallization without causing widespread melting. Crystallization of the film occurs as a very small portion of the silicon film is melted and allowed to cool. Ideally, the laser should melt the silicon film through its entire thickness, but not damage the substrate. Toward this end, a layer of silicon dioxide is sometimes added to act as a thermal barrier.[49] This allows the use of substrates that cannot be exposed to the high temperatures of standard annealing, polymers for instance. Polymer-backed solar cells are of interest for seamlessly integrated power production schemes that involve placing photovoltaics on everyday surfaces.

A third method for crystallizing amorphous silicon is the use of a thermal plasma jet. This strategy is an attempt to alleviate some of the problems associated with laser processing – namely the small region of crystallization and the high cost of the process on a production scale. The plasma torch is a simple piece of equipment that is used to anneal the amorphous silicon thermally. Compared to the laser method, this technique is simpler and more cost-effective.[50] Plasma torch annealing is attractive because the process parameters and equipment dimensions can be changed easily to yield varying levels of performance. A high level of crystallization (~90%) can be obtained with this method. Disadvantages include difficulty achieving uniformity in the crystallization of the film. While this method is applied frequently to silicon on a glass substrate, processing temperatures may be too high for polymers.

See also edit

References edit

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crystalline, silicon, crystalline, forms, silicon, either, polycrystalline, silicon, poly, consisting, small, crystals, monocrystalline, silicon, mono, continuous, crystal, dominant, semiconducting, material, used, photovoltaic, technology, production, solar, . Crystalline silicon or c Si Is the crystalline forms of silicon either polycrystalline silicon poly Si consisting of small crystals or monocrystalline silicon mono Si a continuous crystal Crystalline silicon is the dominant semiconducting material used in photovoltaic technology for the production of solar cells These cells are assembled into solar panels as part of a photovoltaic system to generate solar power from sunlight Crystalline silicon solar cells are made of either Poly Silicon left side or Mono Silicon right side In electronics crystalline silicon is typically the monocrystalline form of silicon and is used for producing microchips This silicon contains much lower impurity levels than those required for solar cells Production of semiconductor grade silicon involves a chemical purification to produce Hyper pure Polysilicon followed by a recrystallization process to grow monocrystalline silicon The cylindrical boules are then cut into wafers for further processing Solar cells made of crystalline silicon are often called conventional traditional or first generation solar cells as they were developed in the 1950s and remained the most common type up to the present time 1 2 Because they are produced from 160 to 190 mm thick solar wafers slices from bulks of solar grade silicon they are sometimes called wafer based solar cells Solar cells made from c Si are single junction cells and are generally more efficient than their rival technologies which are the second generation thin film solar cells the most important being CdTe CIGS and amorphous silicon a Si Amorphous silicon is an allotropic variant of silicon and amorphous means without shape to describe its non crystalline form 3 29 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Classification 1 1 1 PV industry 1 1 2 Generations 1 2 Comparison of technical specifications 1 3 Market share 1 4 Efficiency 1 5 Energy costs of manufacture 1 6 Toxicity 2 Cell technologies 2 1 PERC solar cell 2 2 HIT solar cell 2 2 1 Fabrication of HIT cells 2 2 2 Opto electrical modeling and characterization of HIT cells 3 Mono silicon 4 Polycrystalline silicon 5 Not classified as Crystalline silicon 5 1 Amorphous silicon 5 2 Nanocrystalline silicon 5 3 Protocrystalline silicon 6 Transformation of amorphous into crystalline silicon 6 1 Low temperature induced crystallization 7 See also 8 ReferencesOverview editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2021 Global PV market by technology in 2021 4 24 25 CdTe 4 1 a Si 0 1 CIGS 0 8 mono Si 82 multi Si 13 Classification edit The allotropic forms of silicon range from a single crystalline structure to a completely unordered amorphous structure with several intermediate varieties In addition each of these different forms can possess several names and even more abbreviations and often cause confusion to non experts especially as some materials and their application as a PV technology are of minor significance while other materials are of outstanding importance PV industry edit In photovoltaic industry materials are commonly grouped into the following two categories Crystalline silicon c Si used in conventional wafer based solar cells Monocrystalline silicon mono Si Polycrystalline silicon multi Si Ribbon silicon ribbon Si has currently no market 3 17 18 Other materials not classified as crystalline silicon used in thin film and other solar cell technologies Amorphous silicon a Si Nanocrystalline silicon nc Si Protocrystalline silicon pc Si Other established non silicon materials such as CdTe CIGS Emerging photovoltaics Multi junction solar cells MJ commonly used for solar panels on spacecraft for space based solar power They are also used in concentrator photovoltaics CPV HCPV an emerging technology best suited for locations that receive much sunlight Generations edit Alternatively different types of solar cells and or their semiconducting materials can be classified by generations First generation solar cells are made of crystalline silicon also called conventional traditional wafer based solar cells and include monocrystalline mono Si and polycrystalline multi Si semiconducting materials Second generation solar cells or panels are based on thin film technology and are of commercially significant importance These include CdTe CIGS and amorphous silicon Third generation solar cells are often labeled as emerging technologies with little or no market significance and include a large range of substances mostly organic often using organometallic compounds Arguably multi junction photovoltaic cells can be classified to neither of these generations A typical triple junction semiconductor is made of InGaP In GaAs Ge 5 6 Comparison of technical specifications edit Categories Technology h VOC V ISC A W m2 t mm Thin film solar cells a Si 11 1 6 3 0 0089 33 1 CdTe 16 5 0 86 0 029 5 CIGS 20 5 Market share edit nbsp Global Photovoltaics market share by technology 1980 2021 4 24 25 In 2013 conventional crystalline silicon technology dominated worldwide PV production with multi Si leading the market ahead of mono Si accounting for 54 and 36 respectively For the last ten years worldwide market share of thin film technologies stagnated below 18 and currently stand at 9 In the thin film market CdTe leads with an annual production of 2 GWp or 5 followed by a Si and CIGS both around 2 3 4 18 Alltime deployed PV capacity of 139 gigawatts cumulative as of 2013 splits up into 121 GW crystalline silicon 87 and 18 GW thin film 13 technology 3 41 Efficiency edit nbsp Conversion Efficiencies of best research solar cells worldwide for various Photovoltaic Technologies since 1976 Main article Solar cell efficiency The conversion efficiency of PV devices describes the energy ratio of the outgoing electrical power compared to the incoming radiated light A single solar cells has generally a better or higher efficiency than an entire solar module Additionally lab efficiency is always far superior to that of goods that are sold commercially Lab cells In 2013 record Lab cell efficiency was highest for crystalline silicon However multi silicon is followed closely by cadmium telluride and copper indium gallium selenide solar cells 25 6 mono Si cell 20 4 multi Si cell 21 7 CIGS cell 21 5 CdTe cell Both sides contacted silicon solar cells as of 2021 26 and possibly above 7 8 Modules The average commercial crystalline silicon module increased its efficiency from about 12 to 16 over the last ten years In the same period CdTe modules improved their efficiency from 9 to 16 The modules performing best under lab conditions in 2014 were made of monocrystalline silicon They were 7 above the efficiency of commercially produced modules 23 over 16 which indicated that the conventional silicon technology still had potential to improve and therefore maintain its leading position 3 6 Energy costs of manufacture edit Crystalline silicon has a high cost in energy because silicon is produced by the reduction of high grade quartz sand in an electric furnace The electricity generated for this process may produce greenhouse gas emissions This coke fired smelting process occurs at high temperatures of more than 1 000 C and is very energy intensive using about 11 kilowatt hours kWh per kilogram of silicon 9 The energy requirements of this process per unit of silicon metal produced may be relatively inelastic But major energy cost reductions per photovoltaic product have been made as silicon cells have become more efficient at converting sunlight larger silicon metal ingots are cut with less waste into thinner wafers silicon waste from manufacture is recycled and material costs have reduced 3 29 Toxicity edit With the exception of amorphous silicon most commercially established PV technologies use toxic heavy metals CIGS often uses a CdS buffer layer and the semiconductor material of CdTe technology itself contains the toxic cadmium Cd In the case of crystalline silicon modules the solder material that joins the copper strings of the cells it contains about 36 of lead Pb Moreover the paste used for screen printing front and back contacts contains traces of Pb and sometimes Cd as well It is estimated that about 1 000 metric tonnes of Pb have been used for 100 gigawatts of c Si solar modules However there is no fundamental need for lead in the solder alloy 10 Cell technologies editPERC solar cell edit Passivated emitter rear contact PERC solar cells 11 consist of the addition of an extra layer to the rear side of a solar cell This dielectric passive layer acts to reflect unabsorbed light back to the solar cell for a second absorption attempt increasing the solar cell efficiency 12 A PERC is created through an additional film deposition and etching process Etching can be done either by chemical or laser processing About 80 of solar panels worldwide use the PERC design 13 Martin Green Andrew Blakers Jianhua Zhao and Aihua Wang won the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering in 2023 for development of the PERC solar cell 14 HIT solar cell edit Main article Heterojunction solar cell nbsp Schematics of a HIT cell A HIT solar cell is composed of a mono thin crystalline silicon wafer surrounded by ultra thin amorphous silicon layers 15 The acronym HIT stands for heterojunction with intrinsic thin layer HIT cells are produced by the Japanese multinational electronics corporation Panasonic see also Sanyo Solar cells and plants 16 Panasonic and several other groups have reported several advantages of the HIT design over its traditional c Si counterpart 1 An intrinsic a Si layer can act as an effective surface passivation layer for c Si wafer 2 The p n doped a Si functions as an effective emitter BSF for the cell 3 The a Si layers are deposited at much lower temperature compared to the processing temperatures for traditional diffused c Si technology 4 The HIT cell has a lower temperature coefficient compared to c Si cell technology Owing to all these advantages this new hetero junction solar cell is a considered to be a promising low cost alternative to traditional c Si based solar cells Fabrication of HIT cells edit The details of the fabrication sequence vary from group to group Typically in good quality CZ FZ grown c Si wafer with 1ms lifetimes are used as the absorber layer of HIT cells Using alkaline etchants such as NaOH or CH3 4NOH the 100 surface of the wafer is textured to form the pyramids of 5 10mm height Next the wafer is cleaned using peroxide and HF solutions This is followed by deposition of intrinsic a Si passivation layer typically through PECVD or Hot wire CVD 17 18 The silane SiH4 gas diluted with H2 is used as a precursor The deposition temperature and pressure is maintained at 200o C and 0 1 1 Torr Precise control over this step is essential to avoid the formation of defective epitaxial Si 19 Cycles of deposition and annealing and H2 plasma treatment are shown to have provided excellent surface passivation 20 21 Diborane or Trimethylboron gas mixed with SiH4 is used to deposit p type a Si layer while Phosphine gas mixed with SiH4 is used to deposit n type a Si layer Direct deposition of doped a Si layers on c Si wafer is shown to have very poor passivation properties 22 This is most likely due to dopant induced defect generation in a Si layers 23 Sputtered Indium Tin Oxide ITO is commonly used as a transparent conductive oxide TCO layer on top of the front and back a Si layer in bi facial design as a Si has high lateral resistance It is generally deposited on the back side as well fully metallized cell to avoid diffusion of back metal and also for impedance matching for the reflected light 24 The silver aluminum grid of 50 100mm thick is deposited through stencil printing for the front contact and back contact for bi facial design The detailed description of the fabrication process can be found in 25 Opto electrical modeling and characterization of HIT cells edit The literature discusses several studies to interpret carrier transport bottlenecks in these cells Traditional light and dark I V are extensively studied 26 27 28 and are observed to have several non trivial features which cannot be explained using the traditional solar cell diode theory 29 This is because of the presence of hetero junction between the intrinsic a Si layer and c Si wafer which introduces additional complexities to current flow 26 30 In addition there has been significant efforts to characterize this solar cell using C V 31 32 impedance spectroscopy 31 33 34 surface photo voltage 35 suns Voc 36 37 to produce complementary information Further a number of design improvements such as the use of new emitters 38 bifacial configuration interdigitated back contact IBC configuration 39 bifacial tandem configuration 40 are actively being pursued Mono silicon edit nbsp Schematic of allotropic forms of silicon Main article Monocrystalline silicon Monocrystalline silicon mono c Si is a form in which the crystal structure is homogeneous throughout the material the orientation lattice parameter and electronic properties are constant throughout the material 41 Dopant atoms such as phosphorus and boron are often incorporated into the film to make the silicon n type or p type respectively Monocrystalline silicon is fabricated in the form of silicon wafers usually by the Czochralski Growth method and can be quite expensive depending on the radial size of the desired single crystal wafer around 200 for a 300 mm Si wafer 41 This monocrystalline material while useful is one of the chief expenses associated with producing photovoltaics where approximately 40 of the final price of the product is attributable to the cost of the starting silicon wafer used in cell fabrication 42 Polycrystalline silicon editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Polycrystalline silicon is composed of many smaller silicon grains of varied crystallographic orientation typically gt 1 mm in size This material can be synthesized easily by allowing liquid silicon to cool using a seed crystal of the desired crystal structure Additionally other methods for forming smaller grained polycrystalline silicon poly Si exist such as high temperature chemical vapor deposition CVD Not classified as Crystalline silicon editThese allotropic forms of silicon are not classified as crystalline silicon They belong to the group of thin film solar cells Amorphous silicon edit Amorphous silicon a Si has no long range periodic order The application of amorphous silicon to photovoltaics as a standalone material is somewhat limited by its inferior electronic properties 43 When paired with microcrystalline silicon in tandem and triple junction solar cells however higher efficiency can be attained than with single junction solar cells 44 This tandem assembly of solar cells allows one to obtain a thin film material with a bandgap of around 1 12 eV the same as single crystal silicon compared to the bandgap of amorphous silicon of 1 7 1 8 eV bandgap Tandem solar cells are then attractive since they can be fabricated with a bandgap similar to single crystal silicon but with the ease of amorphous silicon Nanocrystalline silicon edit Nanocrystalline silicon nc Si sometimes also known as microcrystalline silicon mc Si is a form of porous silicon 45 It is an allotropic form of silicon with paracrystalline structure is similar to amorphous silicon a Si in that it has an amorphous phase Where they differ however is that nc Si has small grains of crystalline silicon within the amorphous phase This is in contrast to polycrystalline silicon poly Si which consists solely of crystalline silicon grains separated by grain boundaries The difference comes solely from the grain size of the crystalline grains Most materials with grains in the micrometre range are actually fine grained polysilicon so nanocrystalline silicon is a better term The term Nanocrystalline silicon refers to a range of materials around the transition region from amorphous to microcrystalline phase in the silicon thin film Protocrystalline silicon edit Protocrystalline silicon has a higher efficiency than amorphous silicon a Si and it has also been shown to improve stability but not eliminate it 46 47 A Protocrystalline phase is a distinct phase occurring during crystal growth which evolves into a microcrystalline form Protocrystalline Si also has a relatively low absorption near the band gap owing to its more ordered crystalline structure Thus protocrystalline and amorphous silicon can be combined in a tandem solar cell where the top layer of thin protocrystalline silicon absorbs short wavelength light whereas the longer wavelengths are absorbed by the underlying a Si substrate Transformation of amorphous into crystalline silicon editAmorphous silicon can be transformed to crystalline silicon using well understood and widely implemented high temperature annealing processes The typical method used in industry requires high temperature compatible materials such as special high temperature glass that is expensive to produce However there are many applications for which this is an inherently unattractive production method Low temperature induced crystallization edit Flexible solar cells have been a topic of interest for less conspicuous integrated power generation than solar power farms These modules may be placed in areas where traditional cells would not be feasible such as wrapped around a telephone pole or cell phone tower In this application a photovoltaic material may be applied to a flexible substrate often a polymer Such substrates cannot survive the high temperatures experienced during traditional annealing Instead novel methods of crystallizing the silicon without disturbing the underlying substrate have been studied extensively Aluminum induced crystallization AIC and local laser crystallization are common in the literature however not extensively used in industry In both of these methods amorphous silicon is grown using traditional techniques such as plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition PECVD The crystallization methods diverge during post deposition processing In aluminum induced crystallization a thin layer of aluminum 50 nm or less is deposited by physical vapor deposition onto the surface of the amorphous silicon This stack of material is then annealed at a relatively low temperature between 140 C and 200 C in a vacuum The aluminum that diffuses into the amorphous silicon is believed to weaken the hydrogen bonds present allowing crystal nucleation and growth 48 Experiments have shown that polycrystalline silicon with grains on the order of 0 2 0 3 mm can be produced at temperatures as low as 150 C The volume fraction of the film that is crystallized is dependent on the length of the annealing process 48 Aluminum induced crystallization produces polycrystalline silicon with suitable crystallographic and electronic properties that make it a candidate for producing polycrystalline thin films for photovoltaics 48 AIC can be used to generate crystalline silicon nanowires and other nano scale structures Another method of achieving the same result is the use of a laser to heat the silicon locally without heating the underlying substrate beyond some upper temperature limit An excimer laser or alternatively green lasers such as a frequency doubled Nd YAG laser is used to heat the amorphous silicon supplying the energy necessary to nucleate grain growth The laser fluence must be carefully controlled in order to induce crystallization without causing widespread melting Crystallization of the film occurs as a very small portion of the silicon film is melted and allowed to cool Ideally the laser should melt the silicon film through its entire thickness but not damage the substrate Toward this end a layer of silicon dioxide is sometimes added to act as a thermal barrier 49 This allows the use of substrates that cannot be exposed to the high temperatures of standard annealing polymers for instance Polymer backed solar cells are of interest for seamlessly integrated power production schemes that involve placing photovoltaics on everyday surfaces A third method for crystallizing amorphous silicon is the use of a thermal plasma jet This strategy is an attempt to alleviate some of the problems associated with laser processing namely the small region of crystallization and the high cost of the process on a production scale The plasma torch is a simple piece of equipment that is used to anneal the amorphous silicon thermally Compared to the laser method this technique is simpler and more cost effective 50 Plasma torch annealing is attractive because the process parameters and equipment dimensions can be changed easily to yield varying levels of 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Retrieved 23 September 2014 assivated emitter rear contact solar cells are at 20 efficiency today but price premiums are steep GreentechMedia 14 August 2014 What is PERC Why should you care Solar Power World 5 July 2016 International Technology Roadmap for Photovoltaic ITRPV vdma org Retrieved 9 April 2024 PERC Solar Photovoltaic Technology Archived copy Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 5 August 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Why Panasonic HIT Panasonic Solar HIT Eco solutions Business Panasonic Global panasonic net Retrieved 17 April 2018 Taguchi Mikio Terakawa Akira Maruyama Eiji Tanaka Makoto 1 September 2005 Obtaining a higher Voc in HIT cells Progress in Photovoltaics Research and Applications 13 6 481 488 doi 10 1002 pip 646 ISSN 1099 159X Wang T H Iwaniczko E Page M R Levi D H Yan Y Yelundur V Branz H M Rohatgi A Wang Q 2005 Effective interfaces in silicon heterojunction solar cells 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Crystalline silicon amp oldid 1218052795 PERC solar cell, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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