Considering the rapidly growing energy demand in worldwide and climate deterioration caused by fossil fuel, the remarkable potential of solar energy has captured the attention of individuals and industries alike. Among different techniques, poly-Si based passivating contacts have
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Considering the rapidly growing energy demand in worldwide and climate deterioration caused by fossil fuel, the remarkable potential of solar energy has captured the attention of individuals and industries alike. Among different techniques, poly-Si based passivating contacts have shown great performance on solar cell application, which enabling a high efficiency of over 26%. Plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) as one of the promising technologies in a-Si contacting layer fabrication has gradually replaced the conventional LPCVD method in industry. However, the accompanied severe ion bombardment is not negligible, especially on its underlying fragile tunnelling oxide. In this work, the impact of PECVD a-Si:H contacting layer deposition on poly-Si/SiOx passivating contact is investigated.
PECVD radio-frequency (RF) power for the contacting a-Si layer on the underlying SiOx is the only variable in this project, varying from 5 W to 55 W, and pinhole density acts as a bridge to help analyse the intrinsic principles. Firstly, the results of a-Si:H thin film characterization suggest that with an increasing RF power, the a-Si:H thin film is grown at a higher deposition rate and becomes porous. In addition, the pinholes in tunnel oxide are inspected by applying the concepts of “selective etching” and “pinhole magnification”. With a two-step five-point sampling method, it is shown that the effect of RF power on the pinhole density is not monotonically increasing. The highest value is found at 25 W. To explain this, a concept of “protective layer” is proposed, which is defined as a buffer layer (contacting layer) formed at the very beginning during a-Si:H deposition. It appears to be more effective when higher RF power (> 35 W) is applied. Another influence on tunnel oxide property is discussed according to the result from XPS measurement. The percentage of Si4+ species is found in the case of 25 W, corresponding to the highest pinhole density. This proves to some extent that the severe particle bombardment brought by strong power would weaken or directly break the Si-O bonds in the PECVD substrate, that is the tunnel oxide in our case.
As a result of thin film characterization, five factors contribute to pinhole formation: (i) Defects in tunnel oxide from imperfect oxidation leave potential for pinhole formation. (ii) Severe ion bombardments in PECVD deposition are allowed to weaken or break Si-O in SiOx. (iii) Island growth of a-Si:H contacting layer makes the exposed region in tunnel oxide continue to be damaged. (iv) “Buffer layer” formation protects the substrate from ion bombardments. (v) The tensile stress applied by a-Si:H films during annealing intensifies the formation of pinholes.
Subsequently, an unexpected result from passivation quality assessment is that higher passivation level is presented with higher pinhole density. The best passivation quality is found in the case of 25 W, with J0 of 3.3 fA/cm2 and iVoc of 714 mV. Further, a large optimal process window for RF power adjustment is found from 25 W to 35 W, which leads to an iVoc over 710 mV, with single side J0 below 3.5 fA/cm2. The results from specific contact resistivity indicate that it is positively correlated to the pinhole density. Eventually, the champion passivating contact with a selectivity of 14.37 in this project is expected to yield a maximum efficiency of 28.9% in an ideal c-Si solar cell.